wmBak Atom Bomb Cafl Be Ineffective!^L ,
Truman
(From HAKKV W. FKANT/)
WASHINGTON. Apnl IS,
Some informed a
the Executive Branch vt the
U.S. Government are private-
ly confident that the courts
will sustain constitutionalitv
of Truman's order seizim;
Steel Plants to avert mike
They pointed uut the Presi-
dent had proclaimed the ex-
istence of a National Emer-
gency as long ago as Decembt
18.1950 when economic mobil-
ization for Defence was get
ting under way and that im-
minence of a dittatroui strike
was obvious current to the
phase of National Kmergencv.
If.-.- contend thai without the
sNxure of tlw steel Plant, than
n ti
At strike which would have
crippled defence production men-
aced MUilary Supply |
".' r i..v. i
.National Emergency than already
Sources alleged thai
wiinom inch action the Presi-
dent would have failed to luliit
his ConttlUillonii] HespoiiMbiiitv
M Commander in Chief of. the
Ud Navy- They made no
comment about nctlon against
the Union who-e \,
ed the dispute.
While tfic iBthority of the
president to make the seizure
order is disputed. those who de-
rend his position point to con-
sideration or the Body of Legal
Doctrine which they contend
holds that the President has "in-
herent power"*' under the .insti-
tution to meet the .emergencv.
Tin v also point to
apparent precedents to Presi-
denUal action although the back-
ground of facts in earlier cam
is not exactly dfnuar. Support-
era of Truman's position suggest-
ed that if the United Stales wciv
actually at war to formal dc-
claration there could >
no controversy about the seizure
order.
t'JV
JUST A JOKESAYS MARGARET I
IT WAS All IN FUN. but Margaret Trumio., daughter of the President,
appears a bit nonplussed by the result of a television program gag. She
was appearing In Hollywood with comedian Jimmy Duranle. In the
course of the act, she was blindfolded and tent to a blackboard to check
OS letters with a piece of cha'k. The result, as pictured, waa tha slogan
"I Like Ike." She erased It and said. "I don't dare go home tonight."
I.ater, Miss Truman admitted she was u on tha Joke and had been
praised for being "auch a great poit," (international Soumlpheroj
U.K. Afakes $8im
Htisiiu-ss Deal
With e
forced the bullion Iruck ...
it was carrying bullion
from downtown bank to veri-
Winle one
man kept the drivct
Tooiniv t11" another
KsNTKiN Anrll n ijmP" 'Mo the truck an.| trani-
Five mJrlrt^nlePrBnmh '^nu'^Ll^ fTSt? ^
delegation to the Moscow crone-, f n^nrh ,. .f "E,"'^ '"
m;c conference Hew back to Lon- %"Tfcbj 'r,,*'^- J,he b?!"
don last night and announced1^"-8 ,h.pn. niade ff >*'
business deals tOtalllnl
Paris Robbers Escape
With $74,285 Gold Bullion
PARIS, April 15.
Four Dandltl held up a bullinn track at the point of a
ub-machine jiun in one uf Pans's busiest boulevards and
Clean getaway with sold ingots worth. $74,285
int-1""'- hulduP naPP>'nl "i biilliant sunshine at 9.90
O.M.T. in the morning in a boulevard jampacked with
vehicles It was so daring that Parisians immediately
thought ,| mutt be Inspired by the British dim in which a
similar holdup occurred. The Dim has been playing to
packed houses in Paris tor several weeks
Ills driving in >n ,. ______________________
French uutomobllo
U.S. Soldiers Asked
To Crusade For Peace
WESTPOINT. NEW YORK. Apr. 15,
General Omar N Brndli . Chairman si the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, said last night theiv were nwnv militaiv largel
(gainst which the atomic b mb would be ineffi
wasted. Bradley in a speed prepared for dclivi
U.S. Military Academy, sa i the myaterj of the atomic
bomb encourages unlimited iieculUlon us t.. Ita ,
war and added: '"Itie faaehiainn of tl .pun im
mediately catches the eye /thow
for an easier, quicker and > more n I m tn the
age old problems of winning . decisive victory
Trouble On No. 2
Eutgtue MUX \oi
Cawae Orash
There are
gets gainst
bom b would
piled. If enen
force-
many military t#v-
which the atomic
im llc< lively be ,i, .
v wanted to disperse
that soldiers walked
ard
the
100 yards apart, thc\ aousd
" ro Europe tomorrow
race <>l the greatest of atumaV
power on earth unles* uther
men were there to stop them.
However kf aw have the mearn
to make tie enemy concentrate
his forces. There are many mrkh-
odW available to destroy his
military offensive power."
A'Bomb Feared
He told the cadets Uiat the
whole world stands In awe of the
tiny but powerful atom. "And
I any time", ha added, "ita use
as a weapon may be entrusted to
your skill und knowledge in i
variety of ways." The general
said the nation's knowledge o-
science ha* outstripped Its rape* -
Ity to control it and appealed to
the soldiers to crusade for peace
while preparing for war.
He stud' "Education and our
own Christian living must give
us control over invention of
science. With nwistious weap-
ons man already has humanity
in danger of being trapped in
this world by lb moral adoles-
cence. Today we know more
about
peace.
SAN JUAN. Apnl IS,
John ii Mndolph, chief avi
lion Division. Inaulau Q
Transportation Authoi Ity whiCr
g** l*a Otande Ai
Piman.etK-,,,, An\v;iy- IX-4 which
ei-ash.xl here >n Kn.l.,
from New York at 22 37 on Thur*.
W unh her Numlier Two PkOtor
not funciinniiiK. lie .mi (he gtmn*
radioed here askuig for Emergeni y
Eqalpment to be made
in* runway because the plane
m.Kht have t.. m..ke l( f.neisi Uiui-
nj. However, the plane landed
rely Hjui.hiipi
to ortlt-iiii mformaUou nvailable
U him the Numlier Two engIrM
funcllune.l perfectly OB Frul.iv
and %ras not responsible for the
i l.isM
future must
passca in thi
word.UP.
31 KILLED l\ Hill 11) \)
ACCtDMNTS'll\ FMANCl
PARIS, April 111
Police said 31 persons ware
killed and 46 wounded in acci-
dcnls in Prance during the forty-
eight hour Easter holldayi
ar than we know about 1 Kigures arc not Anal and it wn
American soldJors of tis*, fen red other mddentB vjbuhi *<
crusaders for redited from
truest sense of the I where commun
-h-hitt
re slow.
IT.
$84(iO0,0flO h^id been concluded
with Russia and Communist
China.
Jack Perry the delegation's
f, said China would sup.
ply Britain with eggs and pork
in exchange fur textiles on a
batter basai. Russia will pay in
itetling for what it buys.
Perry said he would confer
wilh British Aims this week be-
fore returning to Moscow for
further discussions on signing
the .iHi-cements. A previous an-
nouncement from Most
Britain had made a S2fi.UO0.OO0
agreement with China.t'T.
ifi In Hospital
After Wedding
liOUK
Thirty-six paraonj are In hot-
I Lil with '-! | "- rollow-
Ing a weddsfig barqurt Thirty-
i'Ki ( :,.. ,.t an) aura part of
71 quests at the sumptuous ban-
quet in a restaurant here yes-
terday alter the weddlnR uf
Franca Maltia 19 and Glrolano
De Use 32.
All 34 guests in hoapltal hail
generous helpings of weridiin;
cake belie\'ed to be the cause of
the food poisoning.
In addition two waiters who
later helped themselves to the
remnants were in hot)
acute stomach pains. The wed-
ding couple who also ate of the
cake left for the Isle of Capri
immediately after the
/or their honeymoon No word
has been received to indicate
whether they ,irc nl.-o itrickcn.
l\P.
Police had time to make a move.
The robbers left
$40,000 worth of ingots behind
in the truck. Within seconds of
the getaway the two Police cars
earrybii a criminal squad of men
of the
holdup about half a mile fti-.m
the Plate lie L'Opcra in the
heart of the cily.
Other ears patrolled tin
'
catch the gang. The Police
question*
nesses among the larffl
pot from
neighbouring shops an
bul avBrybody had .i dlrTaraat
story to tell and it was some time
uld piece
lugeihei reliable account of
what happened. V.V.
\cw Stumps IsSIH'd
PbilattUtU Erorn ail peruthai of
dtd the (Icncral
Post Office yesterday morning lo
get first day covers of the new
-lamps to commemorate
the Centenary of the ilrsl adhesive

were on Sale.
ii'Himina-
12 and 24 cents,
but in each rase the pattern is
the same. The stamp carries the
portrait of the late King instead
of that of the present Qui
i piituie of the
r i-istagc stamp
Throughout the day then-
long queues in the O.P.' I
Small U.K. Aid To Colonial Empire
liut foreign (jountriw G&tPlenliy 3forP
FORMER KING TO EXPLORE JUNGLE Leader
LAPAZ BOLIVIA, Apt
bloodied I
I') dead
V revol-
i*. and
r who is

:
M-flt ,1 (Ii
Pa*
e h 1 a f.
se sjreart> v.trs_

1

1
[I
; | .
from power lii

I

IK tOUTf TO SOUIH AMERICA where the ex-monarch will take part In
a new exploration of the Jungla between llrull and Vcneauela, former
King Leopold of llelglum and hi* wife. Princess Rcthy, leave a plane
lo board the Dutch ship Amlyk at Lisbon, Portugal. ffnfamatiuaeJV
from All Quarter*
collector
Generals Arrested
HAVANA. Apnl
The Cuban Army Chief
Staff Francisco Tabermlui said >
ex-Kcnerals Quirino Urta, Josej
Monteagudo, Juan Consuegra I
and ex-Colonel Vicente Leon, all |stton of the >Ump to commemorate
supporters of tha Mb 'i^n'ry of tbi Hint adheslTe
dent Carlos PrlO BotSU po^Uae ttuap of the UOand. TtW
THIft is the thret cpnts denomln-
'arrcsted" last night, bul releas-
ed after a few minute-'
ing. Tabcrnilla did not disclose
the nature of the detention <<
queslioninn. Neither ii. I
plain the reason for the exttadi-
1 e\
new lne went Into clrcnlsUnn yes
terdsy.
WINlr^ CRUISE
SEASON ENDS
HEW YORK.
The 22 cruises mil of N
lo the West Isxlie^ and South
SOOTH ANNIVERSARY
iHMhiNi to
ITALY. April IJ, I C
An loeert, twtablaa and tour- ful "" cruise teuoe
ists flock.-]
in Central Italy to-day to eele-' Holland-Amerii a Line each car-
brale the S00tii"i,nniveSrv ol the1 n^' *mc 5-M" *****
uir1h ^ i :!rl. | the season
Italian President i r \
formallv opened a series of eclebra' "OHofJO earned W passengers
,
lies in iwinting, enincering.' 1*"
anatomy. ph)iics. philosophy
summed Up Ihe w\
mee and made him one of

Dignitaries met In n t
art house where: -rarnn
Leonardo was bom oi April IS, )1JVt. ;.;
1432 son of a -icn merch.int r.ere! if,- summer and autumn.
de Vinci.I'.p. -B.l.r.
in three Watl Indies cruises
t he I

rules*.
are not
inly planning full cruise pro-
Not Enough Sailors
For Ships In N.Z.
LONDON.
WELLINGTON: The greater
part of New Zealnnd's naval
strength is lying idle because,
there are not niflViUnt sailors to
man the stUpo, Though two frig-
ates are in Korean waters, four
itaa and one rruiser are
lied up at Auckland. The cruiser
Blirk I'rFjire baa iu>t been to sea
. Zealand acquired her
in 1946.
AMSTERDAM: For less than
23 a Dutch firm ia selling an
ikI Of .ill work." Thus
robot household marvel vacuum
le-ins. polishes the furniture and
floor, peels the vegetables, shakes
'
am, dries your hair sprays
DDT. and can be used as an elec-
tric fa n.
NORWAY: Professor llalvn
Koht. the historian who w
Ian Foreign Minister from
1933 to 1941, has had three hooka
in the List six months.
He will be 79 this summer.
MINNESOTA: One woman
rota in thm Minnesota primary
became so confused that
her own name down on
the ballot paper, then come back
i he could have
another. The officials refused so
one housewife got one vote for
..
tn AVIV: Israeli couples who
tha desert outpost of Eilat
on the shores of the Red Sea
(0 the Hrilish army base at
,.l are to he given n refrlg-
Btor by the government on the
rQi of their Aral baby.
COLOMBO: Ceylon's worst
..t-wave for jtsara has driven
of men. women and
ei.ijiren m the coastal towns of
Sou)h Colombo lo sleep, stripped
i-nudltv. (n the open i
Bul there is
\ terror. The same heat-wave
driven out poifonous snakes
from hiding place* In search of
i .
NEU YORK: Negro blues .singer
Pear" Belley "ecured a divorc
n her fourth husband
John Pinkelt. Junior, on grounds
thai i'.nketi "split my skull open
with ,i gun" She told a Las
Vegas court that Pinkett. whom
tied three years ago. also
tried to interfere with her career.
Preucfa Gup tun* 384
SAIGON. April 15
r French command said
French troops successfully com-
'lean up operation in
Centra! Vietnam, capturing 304
rebel* including r.ii VietBtentl
Thaj aid Dial two In-
fantry led par. troop battalions
have participated in the eight
ting northwest of Hue
regroup their forces. French
sliahtly
wounded, according to the com-
munique, i' r.
LONDON?
British Government sjranLs and loans to Colonial ter-
ritories and Protectorates from Ihe end of the war to Decem-
ber 31st. 1951. reached a total of only i: 114.700.(100.
But similar loans and gifts to forciKii countries in tha
same period reached 1,285.300.000- "which docs not ap-
pear to err on the side of parsimony," says the Empire
Industries Association, commentini; on this disparitv
Tha IlEiin-s were cm'pile.l l.v
the Association from InfUrnMUori
given by various MlrUati
t" asjgaUotH In tag Ha of
Commons. Alut half the flfuno
for funds supt)lied u, ;i.i,H;r.
countries represents lonna and re-
coverable .nd. while the rwsnalndai
represents outrlitht ,;il' aft]
foreign countries temselvcs or to
international organisations.
I ariiuui For
I inland Fund
JUST S3.00 were added to
the Tarnum for Finland Fund
yesterday. This fond h'
been started to defray the ex
peu.es of Ace cyclist Kan
Farnum at the Olympic Sports
in Helsinki next July. Do
your bit to help this deserving
cause Bend your donaUon to
Barclay's Bank, tha Royal
Bank or Canada and the Bar-
bados Advocate.
ami. pnrtiaoM
Telephone ^iV.orkers
Gd Wage liuriasr-
NE^V YORK, AprU 15,
Striking O|>erators signed
wage agreement with the Now
Jersey. Bell Telephone Company,
but their return to work hinged
on the Western Kleetrie Dispute
which has disrupted the talap] ne
service across the nation. Tin
agreement signed .shortly oftet
midnight provided weekly wage i'w
creases from 4 dollars to 4.4
dolluni and 'f^in|Be benefit*!.
The end of the new Jersey dis-
pute which Involved 10,500 work-
ers added up to 'one more patWrn
settlement" in the nationwide
telephone strike, but operators
said they would continue to
observe picket lines set up by
16,000 striking Western Electric
employees.
Both belong to Communications
Workers of America (CIO)
Further ncgotiauon* were wrhed-
uled in New York today in
uttempt to end Ute eight-day-old
strike by Western Electric Com-
pany employees in 43 states i
the district of Columbia.
The Cok
till .500,000
f3.200.0O0 Ii
(rants and Louno
iul
llguio In
in grants
I- .... I'hr
hide
n (I
not
lude advances made to th
Overseas Food Cori-oraii..:
I Dcvulpllietit
Itll
ommcntv
"N oae would quarrel will
any British (ioverimient fo
renderk-ie cencroun flnanrla
oos'sUnre In any dlreello
v.'hfr It In legitimately urgent
ii.; if the -.Hid are available
Rut making all allowance* foi
the unjfiit necessity In in.i.
eoaes. the contrast betwrcn tht
amount of money fsund foi
Countrirs of the t'omcnonuralll
and Cmplrr of any description
and that (found fur Internation-
al purpoaera and for rorrlRii
eounific Is so treat ** lo induce
om- niitvins.
Colonial IvestMirces
1 IIils money been (
ut of our own resources, wc
should still ftel inclined to enquire
Whether there were not tenltorie..
inside the Empire who would not
have been clad to !* th
and who Incidentally might have
employed such assistance lr
manner more proflt.iil
the borrower and the lander
"One cannot help foeling
that much of the money
lavishly expended by the Over-
seas Food Corporation and the
Colonial Developnie '
Uon might have Dei
employed towards
Colon, it .; ,v. Qjrtents
develope their own resource
ga On Fagc S
!Xew Jersey Goes To Polls
In TaftIke Ctontesi
RSW JKHSKV. April If..
Seiiiii. i Etoberl A. XWt and Qwtural flaannmirrt will
put their pohtic;il fortunes at &take to-day whag) LI
peeled thiii OM rnilUoD New Ji-rscy volets will pick thail
pi.'.i I. nii.ll choice The towwtWl 0( wjiiii hul cloudy
a. ithei fmm th*openiagof ihe poljgat7am E.S.T. until
B p ni. rloaiog oromlaad b bring out Qm haavtaal prlmarj
\-. t insr in the StatVa history. The bajlot waa con |
with 211 candldataa eektag 98 Republican and :* Demo
cratic seats at the parlies' National Nomination Convention!
Automatic tubulating njachlnee -
ten expected to speed counting
... OUDaUa, out slowei*
lallying In the rural area
cause the liiu.1 "iil'unas W "
until late Uaitg
Cemvemtton Votes
Mopuallean and Democraiic
lawhnJcaUj wero not
bul I hi- wiimei- in
popular voting was expected to
raoatre a majm -ii..te of eonvin-
tion ballot.-, ll.ii..M k Staaaen.
i'nrmcr Oovarnor of Minnesota,
i EU pubUoan ballot with
i ;
Tan.
aad Katauvar was tha
antared. Eisen-
hower, factni in- in t popularity|
rvatgnini as bead ..t tl
i i
upnotl of Qorernof Aifnvi k
ItataO nuil guon
;
'brwaklng nil word" by
i
malninj neutral, waited a furl.."*
,ill-..ot it : : .
ttw ild elalm
ii the Ohio Ik d ai to 2S
per cent of the t< B i
r i
. Ictorlag n. -
redlcted
0*3 Bor tha Oaoioral.
daa u.-ie as
their chancoa f"i national aurvlvaj
nd "i* i iii |> lha
in .'.
point 10 Hi. i an a bmi
tmited states srhlcn i
Murder In
Duplicate
.... It ( inihhi t Happen
Twice
WATCH out for "Murder la
DiiiiIk no' by ObENN CAKR.
This 1- a cilme story wfaicli
will be run In the Evening
Advocate iu leven Initsl
m*nts, replsclua the "Fsbinu
of the Tsrd" series.
The flrt Instalaieiit appears
unit Monday
Don't MIHH it.
Winning
loon . in Mow
1
Pal
. 1 iraUi %V d b| h
" M.i.-h tt. in the Ken tfj p-
hire prtmary,
1 I-
\i;\\ B.O.A.C
SERVICE To
vWA
lewfotindl
i .

\'\ |.|pi.
he for passen-
. \ ..11 and
Bsj v.i-j, ., 1
lYans-Cnrftoli
I
point -.(. the

it ii 1 Pre 1 ai 1 1 on* i
1
-.
, I DO fOOd
having number at smull terri-
i. all ovi-i- the place.
1 old be brought under one
single unit for Ihu purpose of

v. ,. hoping to have , Con-

U> deal with lha
Uon oi v- dt 1 ation and 1 hope that
ut of It" it"
said.
Ldtrd Munster who arrived here
a, On !>*|r 5
''You're fiioloknow. Jimm-.
Ihe t.i-t lime we camr here
it mi ii new cocktail: this
ir- an lir-iiiu Baa
. loo."
"11^ ,lo imr belt to
[Irait. 11 hoi'i> hi you'd
tik* tlum. I hey do
fg aaw a rltanrr
and a tonUr tmokt."
sllOt'X ( 1TV. IOWA, Apr. IS,
IKt iNIIKd.lli TOWN1- of IKe Miwiurl \ .-ll- were lurnrri
bilo lsUada b* the relentless advance of the record Miwourt
river flood crest. The Miaasssipfi River mr.inv.hllr swept Into St
Paul and Wlnona, Mlnncapolii. lo begin Us devoalatlna march Pi the
south which the Red Cross said would brine record crests as far
-oulh as the Hsnalbsl MusMMiii.
In eight flood soaked states of the mid west u total of more than
85.000 persona were homeless.
The Red Cross said 74.000 persons were "affected." Fur the most
part, normal life was suspended as the vast area bent every effort
t< V< op the rivers in check.
The deepening: crest of the Missouri sped southward down ihe
Jow.i-Nebraska border. It was due to crest to-day at well ovei
opposite the fowo towns of Sloan. Whiting and Onawa from 25 to 40
miles south of Sioux Ci'y.U.P
l'.\. < jOim.4 il Krf uses
To Wear BlspaUs
a YOIIK. Apiii IS.
Th.- United riauoni Beeunty
Council lefUaad ia*t oigbl to hear
the full dress debate on Tunisia's
I :
The Council on a live to
ii four bat*
jec-ted tin i
4 the AsJan-Africnn
tli. to at on
has called foi
the ground that
issue- waa an ucanul
threat to
security The net
were Russia. Nation-1
P
M
Unite.! Btagea, Turke]
and the Netherlands ..1
,.
put the debate i
-C1M
" You are behind thr times.
yJaVj '""I lyrical about
them for \
$1.04 lor 50
Smoke lo your throat's content
du MAURIER
THE EXCLUSIVE
1 I OIWEIBUT
FILTER T
WILKINIOH A WSTVBS
P CIGARETTE
ro.. I TO., tl!)i;tTO\VM

PAGI tWO
bAKBAUOS AUVOtATK
WEDNESDAY, APBIL 1. 1M
Ccmib CaULnq
The Women's
Editor Asks..
LADY STOW of "Higl.gi.le"
turned I .eetarday
morning ).. ll.W.I.A ..ftcr mnd-
iin.ida>> with her
H< now J M Stow.
r M.C who i at prtaM \ I
Qovtmor of taw Wlndwvd
n the absence of Sir Rob*
erl Arunricll who is in the U K
Lady St. was tn St Lucia for
one wee*.
Married Easter Monday
MfSS MARGARET KNIGHT,
younger daughter of Mi.
and Mrs. Leonard Knight o(
-Clifton'", Stiathrlydc. was ma-
rard on Easter Monday at St
I-eonard's Chf-rh to Mr. Arthur
Kirkland, elrin .-on of Mr* p. J
Urkland of Auvhenblac. Kit -
< ardiDcshire, Scotland
They left yesterday by air for
TrUndM MKl thr i" nrymoon i
being spent in Trinidad. New
York and Scotland.
With Barclays Bank
Jk#H NOKMAN ROBINSON
XT*, who i* now employed witl"
Barclays Bank. Grenada, left the I
.s_and over the week eqd .
j *h*,ri holiday with bii
rtsattvea.. Ho u the son of Mi
and Mrs. Dough... II"',
Avenue, miicvin. .
Indefinite Stay
**KS PETEH WARIU.K ....
i* companied by her |M
rhildren arrived from BBakS
J" Canada by TC.A on Gnnd
Friday on an indetinile stay. Mr*
Wardle u the former Clean.(
Skeete. djughtei rat Mr and M'
Arthur Skeete of "Ben tie v
Chrlst Church.
Arriving with ihcm were M
Wardle^ mother and her sistei
Mrs. Colin Thoma*.
up to England recenth
PUntr Leave.
MR PRANK CHILD, a plant-
er of St. Vincent who was in
Barbados for u numlwr of weeks
m the interest of hi health, re-
turned home on Sunday night by
the R.MS. Lad> Rodney.
He is a brolher of Mr. Arthui
Child. Q.C of TnnliJ.id.
Impressed
MRS. DOROTHEA KING.
B.A., Toronto and Oxon.
left for Bermuda last week by
T.C.A. after paying ;i visit to the
island.
A member of the Social Wel-
fare Board of Bermuda, Mrs
King
POCKET CAP.TC
Hv OSB1 Kl I '
i
M
In
Antigua
.1 DUBUOM
of the firm of Messrs *
i H Dubisoi. Limited. Lou- ,
a Director of the
antigU btatSsj Limi-
ted, ha* been in Antigua for the
"tree -weeks. He Is sccom-
l ;mied by Mr. J D. Henderson of
the same London firm, Mr. Hen-
is a Director of the Antirui.
fPBgar Factory Limited. llolh
K-ei.-.lfmefi gave cocktail parties. I.
n.bison, at Thomllnaons in
respect of the staff of the Syndi-
cates and Mr, Henderson at the 6
for their staff.
Ml
*enrrjfg awil?. M.
trs nofni; tn PA\
IWf (o
For Two Weeks
AND MRS. DEORAJ
SAMAROO of Trinidad,
arrived here on Sunday by
UW.I.A for a rest and will be
lemsinmg until the end of the
month stay-in., nl Indramer Guest
House. Wort'.iing.
Mr. Suma oo who is a promi-
. -ni.iii 1 S iii Fei -
nandn i veil known in Barba-
dos having visited here on sev-
eral occasions. He was last here
Guianese Medico ,n MJ,' 'or "jr ,
I f-VH A P LACHHMAN SINGH Utl t0 3t' Vinctn*
t-/l,. pant of the BG Ea,t AMONG the passengers lsaw-
Slndian Association and all' ** lnJ " Sunday night by the
iPr^-ktent of the Otii;.n:. lndii-- -> Redmey on a visit to St
in .1 Workers Union left for Vincent were Dr C. O Y. Lowe
jTnmdad by B.W.I.A. DVfll the Chiropractor of Bay Street and
Ret paving a visit to Mrs. Lowe. They were accom-
mr'nted panied bv their daughter Miss D.
Loare-
(.'derations Manager T.C.A.
maurice McGregor,
What are the four isaitntisli
of giving a formal tea?
When u it necessary to pay
visit?
Are people who live in small
towns coossdarcd more saofc-
hi-h than those Who live
cities?
Is It pensUssifeOe when al
tables in a crowded rrstaursnV
are in use to ask str.iner- if
one may sit with them?
Is It ever correct for an em-i
ployer to call the employee By
his or her first name?
At the beginning of a formal
dinner, what 1* the position of
the service plate and the
cutlery that accompanies
I; a woman considered
rogant and contemptible fa, _
gentlemim when she refuses to
thank him for "opening
door" or doing other small
eourtesy for her*
Why is i| necessary for a
debutante 1o wear white at
her coming-out party?
Should one introduce a servant
to a member of the family or
tn a guest?
If a story Is being told, should
a second person interrupt .tad
make corrections or help TMI
the mcidenp ^
'the island !i>
b> his wilt.
| While here Dr. and Mrs.
itaying at
rthing.
ERROL FLYNN'S
W.I. ISLAND
J Spent Tei
Mar
__ w HOLLYWOOD
.r^w Fl>nn, the (Urn tUr. has
Ten Days
WR AND MRS MORRIS .1
.^si?g?^:
MR F
Operauoo
seas Services
Airlines who u on ft rwr^rwx plTaXv ^^ H has three houw
S2S--S ^n.-r'V.^X tSifeSS vSlW- JR-EX .5J?^n
by B.W.I A. They were 'laying
Bl Ihf Hotel Royal.
Mr. Rogers is Governing Di-
tor of Rogers and Howe Ltd..
bW 1 wouidn't llveThere"f*or ever'
Punch Picked Odd Flowers
He Caffterec/ Raiay-Daifies. Carperum'as
By MAX TBELL
-LOOK!" 11 an id. the shadow-girl
stitb the turned-about name, ex-
claimed to Mr. Punch. "Just look
at all the beautiful flowers Tvs
picked!"
Mr. Punch glance J at the large '
oouquet Uacnal was holding. There
*ere daisies and b1ck-eyed tossns
net lady's-shpoers and mm flowers
Sh4 ansp-drsgons and wil^ roses
aio tiger lilies. "Very pretrj," r-
sarksd Mr. r*nnch "No. there's
nothing more pretty than a bouquet
of flowers. Dear me. seeing all those
flowar* that you're Jost picked.
ITanM, reminds me of the flowers 1
mad te pick for my mother when
I was a boy."
"Oh!" said Hanid, who had never
heard Mr. Punch talk of the flowers
ha had ever picked for his mother.
"Were they flowers like thee?"
Qalte Diflereal
Mr. Puaess shook his head. "No,
they were quite different. In fact,"
ha went on. "1 don't think anyone
ever picked the kind of flowers that
( did. I remember one dsy I wan-
dered along; tha edge of the woods
picking nothing but lamp-posies.1*
"Lamp-posies?" said Ranid with
i |iMiled expression. "What kind
of flowers are thoy, Mr."T*unch?"
"Well, they are tall and they
r.ave a large blossom shaped like a
lamp on top. They look." he added,
"almost exactly like little lamp-
posts. And they are very pretty to
look at In the dark with alt their
imps burning."
For mil white hIhh>h
Teey pretty." Mr. Paaea said.
ly like brooms, with their stalks up
ia the air and their flowers on the
lltensa, and you'd And them stand-
ing in s corner of the kitchen."
Tvnet aueer flowers!" said Han-
Id.
"And," continued Mr. Punch,
"there were the milk-bottlchlie*.
and the rainy-daisies and the look-
bMfrflasstera and the alphabelter-
eups. And, of course, there were
alwayi. the wallpaper-flower* and
, the earpetunias and the climbing
' Bteiroee* that went upstslrs and
dewnstairs.
Nicest Flewere
"But the swsetest snd nicest
flowers ef sIV * Mr. Punch,
"ware the hloe door-bells! What a
lovely tlnr-a-ling they had! And
Vihuc shoes, to pass muster
in company, must be spot-
less, immaculate. Use
Propert's White Reaovsto
or Propert'i Shuwhite. No
safer way of making sure
lhat white ihoes arc while f
PROPERTY
SMUWUITE* WHITE RENOVATOR
In Qmtam Ml* Spotv* *
',>, FOR HOT-HOT DAYS
USE COOL-COOL TALC
island." he says
b*M
Mnnlh-
Bu
Frlftrf.
S Wr,
and Hi
Islled the Oovernment In- rccloi
^pain. Tr:
After Two
AFTER spending about tw<
months holiday staying ot
the Cosmopolitan Guest House.
Hay Street, Dr. Kenneth Wray
and Mr. Nathaniel Hinds of Brfl-
sfa fluwi returned home on W.i Cricket Board of Contro
Back from Trinidad "I'm raising cattle. I also built
MR. W ANTHONY of Mnrcsnl church on the Islandput up 50
Beach Club returned from K".r cpni 9f *"'* money to build .
by BW.I.A. after pay- HS*.!*1*" Io. and relax,
irsg n short siaH to the Island.
For Cricket Board Meet
MR. F A. C CLAIHMONTE
left (or Trinidad on Monday
British
i meeting of the
the Children^
and other slmi-
1 b) th. KM S. Ladv
Dental Surgeon
is Managing Di-
Sosp und Oil
Hinds
c;
T.L.L. Employee
MR. MAX MARSHAl.l
Trinidad Leaseholds Ltd. i
turned to Trinidad on Sunday by
B.W.I A. nfler ^prndlng a noli-
On Way fo U.S.A.
.1iMn.ll School
Goodwill Lcmui
Inr in..tltutlons.
Sho WHS impressed by Ihe So-
1 MM! WpKare work beinj rnr- V> KIN .-.ii |ilidliiB lTl-Corrdyn" Maxwells who led
led out in Barbados. She also (he WUIvffl Barbados left for tor Trinidad on Thursday to
-oiMiilered Barbados a beautiful Trinidad Of. ,,-eek end by spsnd Ihe Baiter holiday, es-
ld and as yet unspoilt by BW.I.A Dot .' tlda on his way peeta to return home early next
back to the U.S.A. week.
Reluming Next Week
WB CHAHIJK PTTERKIN
Ranid waa salonUhed to hsar I tow basotiftuly th7 "" "!;'n
about this rtnuije flower. -And I erst anyotis eso to the door^
.vhat othsr kind, did you plek. Mr Mr. Punch smiled. 1 i.h .1
Punch f* ah. aaked. nV >
tSaSMesrSStS:2* ffi5
had t. bs sound up ...r, day and aw *.
kept swaying back and fsetr on
Ihaii ^1^LiS!!?*ti H-rdd Mi ^ ,
-Iwsya grew on wlndowsills and hear this. She
| faded sway.
- be able to
m
(/H4w,"6tet
Soolhmg 'reih n j Iroorani .
you doiy Ond comforlab
Aodornt-d in iheiroQ-afii* n
TALCUM
wm'ym
|7[ KLIM h per*. of r-M
KLIM ..*.. wll.wtref.i,.,BlUa
VVW.VNV----------.~Ar-*W*A
gUMQsWLITYIS
WWAYSWWHmM
hw r Pscissslas
. iii .mur uuilnriii
, wilk aatsanss in hr
..,. esatoawdMjM,
ratS ne*dd to*
GOOO Kl i '
tourism
BY THE WAY... By Beachcomber ^mhi.m^anH ,He moon
DR
STRABISMUS (Whom
CONNOISSEURS are interested Tax his horse and tax his ,. *-' God Preserve) of Utrechl
In the wine called Chateau body else to fly to the moon. The has foiled more often than any-
F.tTrrvesaoc. served nt Mrs. Doctor now doubts whether the
McGurgle's. The matters say- Tax his houses, tax his lands, (light. His present Idea is to
It Is as British as tea. U la Tax his bUatars on hi* hands, leap-'
and Tax his Ford and t.nx his gn:
made from British gn
bottled at the factory. There Is Tax the roed that ho mu>i ,i..m
the ordinary table wine, and Tax the payroll, tax the sale,
there Is a Grand Premier Cm, Tax his hard-earned paper kali
with more sparkle to It, Of the Tux hU pipe and tax his smoke
him
Burgundy rather than the Claret
type, il gtrai nff no -mill, and
i urik with any dish from
ardines (.< i.v-, icani li has j
not unpleasant after-taste of
rochineal. a substance that gives
it Ihst charming vln rsse tint."
Tax flim
Tax his head, tax hi. hide.
let Ihe government officials ride
Tnx his tow, tax her calf.
Teach I
t1(
tfirvcrnmont i
tbi
Jok'
iii' .,
lie KUnllghl if you
living, lx the deed,
-frog through apaco, using a
Bf floallrig inlands, each
39.171 miles apart. The first
..l-ujcL QiBde of bntiite, bdellium,
snadl TsVaWOTcod cagnlte would be
shot from a rocket on Flambor-
'iiuh Head. A second Island
shot from the llrst
and so on. Bach island would
le magnetised by its prede-
L'cssor and th
Tax the unborn ere they're fed. anchored in the ; trnlonphcrc. The
i.ix their asVOUds, sage' minks this could be done
j beyond th,. i .. ad BM mMWlM*
10s. ..jd. After that rastlaai
ind lax thi-m will, immkind can tackle Ihe sun. As
the gi.te of hell. Pascal would say. all man s
by trouble comes from his inability
M. ('. smith, t -h.it titmoga. Tenn. t.. remain quietly on onepjancl.
Tag hU coffin.
Tax their sot
i Lottos'
T.ix them all .
Tax i iii-it. to
TO-DAYS DARGAMi\
STRIPED RAYON SUITINGS 54"
Navy. Brown. Grey
OPENING SHORTLY . .
PLAIN TROPICALS 54" ...............
Navy, Brown, Cream
HE SHALL BE OPENING \l.|. DAY ON THURSDAY. APRIL
10TII. AND OPENING ON SATURDAY. APRIL 12TH AT 9
O'CLOCK, AND CLOSING AT 1 O'CLOCK.
T. R. EVANS & WHITFIELDS
DIAL 4220
YOUR SHOE STORES
yoi hi;
i;yi;ii\hum. if yoi miss these
two oi isiixinxi, ni.Msar
Al IHE PI AZ 4 THEATRES
ssaBsai i % (bm.,i sire, iihiim.
>... a) iii
Thr /brrrn,-*/
Th* fftui...
Thr Ormmm
or at* itw/
* near *to... aoaaaa xuih
ijANEWYMAN
in THE
\3LU VEIL
JfenJ W(s

.WI.Msl.xy APRIL II. 1M2
BARBADOS ADVOCATE
* PAGE THREE
France Builds Special Fishing Boat For Caribbean
Will Be Ready
Next Summer
PORT-OF-SPAIN.
c*rry one 8,eP further Ihe comprehensive plan of
inch Merchant Marine Department (or the develop-
ment .if the flihini; industry in the Caribbean, a ship
.penally designed for the purpose Is being built in France,
and is expected to arrive on the scene of operations some
time next summer
Thl. was revealed today b.-------------------------------------------------------
Commandant O. Blanche. Ad'mim-
ATTACK SOVIET TREATY PROPOSAL CanadaBV, I ''oh trader" Bring*
Tradelncrease
Expected
Answers To
Women's
Eilitor Asks
Mr-men, Principal. Inscripti,
Maritime. Martinique, in mi inter-
view ..t Kent Hou-c. where he t*
attending the Fishcnt-s Cmifctcnce
spoiwoit-d by the Caribbean Cotn-
miMkMi. m the delegate of the
three French department* in the
Caribbean.
The -fitp. which is as metres in
length and motoi -driven, will
carry the moat Modern equipment ' it Is a large tea wheie
both for i-timmrrKiil llshing .md rt*,ncin * ,0 be the feature enter-
xploraUon, iracludW a talnment. have: (aj Plenty of room
tactlon device known as and good m"*lc (b) A aervant to
Asdic. This device. empli>yint* the ar"w>unce and a hostess to receive
Supersonic principle, emits sound *h*> uesls.
impulse which are, reflected back ,uv*b' tablecloth and decoration?.,
from the sea bed or intervening ,he table set In buffet style, and
fish shoal*. The resulting impulses tn* aervants serving (dt Plenty
appear M blips' of light on a ' '** hot chocolate, sandwlihi -
eathoda .ay tube. In addition to
tha* Invalnabta mechanism, the _
boot will have a radio-bearing 2 u' when death has oc~
equipment, icfrlgerated *tor..j(e curred, a visit must be paid at on.-
and a full .omplemem ..f nelsand !, "* bereaved family;
otbn BtblUf friend or a relative who is sick
deserves a call; (c) after a mem-
Triple Purpose bT of the family has announced
his engagement, the rest of the
The boat will serve a threefold family should call upon his
purpose. It will be used for com- fiancee; (d) a visit of conKratula-
merctal fishing, for exploration of tion should be paid a new mother
watar area*, and and gift should be preeented to
for train,,;,: local nsfcirwisil Of the baby
'In- n .' H IS ll n ; I apecUd
that nora than haaff will be West S. Yes, as a general rule a
l,IMI-1" mm* in a "mall town has only ana
The mal of the *Jp w.l. mart JLfflJ "** "^Vav^a? a-
nSmSi^":,r ^tai^gSHk
t n%Z S',"TLi'b0,2"'4?' ? "V -tl1 be , ,clnSh a, to
the -Ofllee Selenliltaue Tech- ,,,. ,ha y .
Saris Maritime.- U. Sfjlor their Swn camfort. On.
might say: "I beg your pardon.
The lira phase, which called for but believe all the tables are In
sclent Hi.- and hmak i] wrvayi on "* Ma>' I 8'1 with yu? m "M
fish location and methods of llsh "**" nsk- don*1 -"' wa,k uvcl*
capture, was completed last yaar and sit down,
and brought notable results.
Perhaps the most important dis-
fORONTO.
ONSIONMENTS of 11.
shad wheat, sardines a
pickled meat arrived from 81.
Juhn and Halifax yesterday by the
S-guenay Terminal' *>tca-\>.hii.
I. -':.-!.-
Trade between the British W. . '''* sraaW.
Indies and Canada is expected to Another Saguansy steamship.
increase considerably during 1952, the tomroal ia axpected to arrive
cordin.. io a Canadian Oovarn- from the Continent and UK to-
nient trade expert in Toronto. day with approximately 1.700 ton-
Mr. Dannn Harvay, director of ,,f sulphate of ammonia and other
the OsaMdtan Trade "Department's general cargo.
(ommod i,. nvinon and one of The rlyta*aa>c will be leaving
.rs of me Bittish West p., today for Trinidad uhii.- Ihe
Indies Tr..d. laon-alisatton plan. Saiuell will be spending fajrte
hat one of the chief f,-w jys here fUsrharguig bafon-!
this quickening of trad* ahe sails on to Trinidad Both
he larger dollar reserves ships are consigned to Messrs
Plantations Ltd.
M "token" trade scheme.
claimed
raaaat!
would &- '
held by I
Undai ii
he said
a.-hieven
trt' flnr i
during
surplu
colonie* tiei.er.itin*
arge dollar surplus for
ne for about 10 years
1949- 50. In 195051
'a* again exceeded and
constilu'.i^ the greatest ever.
Tin.. airpbih was Mwummulaled
from th dollars which were no?
s,>ont from Use
under the token scheme. They wtll
probably L-- dutUibuted to expor-
ters hi the form of a bonus as soon
as the normal quotas had been
fulfilled
SMV.I Kg MO TO
couyaAi Ktfrarc
Another (
surplus was Canada
buy geeaser quantities of sua>u
from thi- British West Indie*
rather than Cuba and th<
Dominican Republic
CHILE TO BUY
CUBAN SUGAR
Chile will
Cuban sugar
SANTIAGO
buy B0.000 tons of
year under a iwo-
well-c
busi-
iviiaaiii.- ii1 (ii :.i mi j\ii (.in; ciiai- . linn, mm iiuiik oil to
eonrj * avMtnea in the form 5"f. " 'mulo,.r would never ,,, ,, hlm_
ot nrnterlinn. n
THI tUSSiAN FgO*OSAl tor -n .inmediata Big Four meeting to dieeuss
German peace treaty terms w<> a*->..iled al a conference in Washington
between Secretary tf State Dean Arheson (right) and representative,
of the West German gu.anu.ie..:. At kft is Western Germany's Secre-
tary of SUta Waller HaUatein. who declared the.Moscow plan was
"absolutely incomplete and without any meaning." In center Is Dr.
Hnna Krekelar. Cherge d'affaires fn- \\> Germany, tInternational>
AlsatianGuardian
Or Killer?
(By ROBERT GLENTON)
AT night time in the public parka, in lonely street., in year commercial jsieemeiit which
the shadows of buildings, the bright eye watch h" l'""T,i'.",' *" bMW~n
They are the Alsatian dons with the pricked ears and Jtr
the switching tails trained by the police and the services to ______________________
trap wrongdoers.
What is the truth about Ihe Alsatian? Is It just another Caen and Aiiituu. and who -"
h.i: or should it ke described as a wild animala "killer"' llvl" loa*> "h "'"f "r.."1,1""
-II. o.ly U, be handled by ex,t. and amvl men? -j* gfiEtZ a "-Y /
For at thia. moment there are several Alsatiaru. con- made for more and mow <>f tfiaat
demned to deatli by magistrates courts for savaging adults, dogs u anted for t
children, other dogs, and sheep
Boy bitten Rector prayesl
Police Alsatian Rajah chased a
burglar a few days ago, caught Years later, a SulTollr. rector
and hung on to him until prayed m his church for his blind
Fran* Faee 1
It u not likely that In the
immediate future any further
imancial assistance of a substantial
n.tture will le made Much of thai
Iraagy given arose out Of
but we suggest thai If any money*
li.vome available in the future.
enquiry should be maJe as to
of this increaaed tM-ther lasrta are not legitimate
decision t.......n.nuii upon them within the
pire rather than outside it "
-Bl'.P.
dmkK0* ^ M CO! (XJNE
J/4///;*:/ .romCOLOCN'
> V ii- > i ui-^pa mil I "ni i\ I a lac I
"- .\rwnst turn MiOf.niAtiei.
ihe Genuine "4711 Eai. u> Co*
Khinc. it is now again ..t.lwma^lr
iccordlng i" ihe fanVous im -< rat
......hi from Colopie on
i the original , made
by poltce
vife's Alsatian Bruce, which had
r -.. 11-year- heen rondemned by a magistrate's
Cari...*..:, amten along the Lee- *Peul",,ll l- employees in his office. 0\$ North London schoolboy wid ord*r " faithful and
I Windanl IsUnds are To u" "ie titles Mr. Mrs. oir Miss l(Warded 50 In damagea after an frt*-nd.-
I,.. . .... (ur .un_ ,.-.. ('rir l,; more bllllnaia-llhe and nlaataan dog ha coronei de- Ju
ploratl...is last year were carried certainly adds dignity to thei^. nouncad Alsatians as
on with the President Theodore 'mc No one
Tissier'1, a ship Iielonrlng to the _, . 'UHg " air ra
"OOm SclentlAqua at Technique e T,,e PIalf "; al**s *** i*h| * wiU rorp'
des Peches Mftrltitne* and fullv fcttlc UP- Beginning at the rig*" rescue-dogs.
eouiinj.-.! bn oejaBBaraimlc and s"u' "f ,ho plat* and n-xl to u"* 1*011* Ukc 3,nrni' wh" rescued
ni.'rll~. roUik. ptote. place the meat knUa flrat. H'i buried p>ul*, who once ran
loyally, and bravery
forces and the Services.
While in lha Northern T>i
tory ot Australia, it is illegal
keep an Alsatian as a pet because
the "killer" streak is said to be
so near ihe surface, in this coun-
Tf.'g-*.*"**tf"."T* lev ordinary householders sent
faithful and lov.ng ^ g ,iall ,,, rcc(.nllv to
the cost of an owner wh
ioughi lot hu dog's life in
lived
the Hsh knife second, the soup three and a half miles In 13 niin-
The assitenment new Is to make spoon third, and last the oyste
practical checks on the Ashing fork. At the left of the plate, and
possibilities indlcatad by the acton- next lo the plate; lint place the
tlflc survey., conducted last year, salad fork, second the meat fork,
In the prof-el's, fishing will be con- ard third the llsh fork. If ad-
dueted on a commercial basis, ditlonal silver is needed. It is put
Commandant Blanche stressed the on the table when needed. Any
fact thai the principal end objec- modern hostess should avoid lay-
tive was to tap the offshore supply |ng too much silver on the table
of llsh. In the light of existing because too much is sometimes
Information. Commandant Blanche confusing and often useless.
Is confident the llsh arc there In
sufllcient number to make com- 7. Indeed! A woman who inten-
mercial fishing practical. t tonally disregards a person's kina-
ness should stay at home until she
learns better.
ith an air-raid
nesssge.
But no one who lives
er-road, Seven Kings.
the last heen used to rescue trapped Al .
Alsatian Huns so crazed with t>-
adult dare near them
Each day more and
hose does an
Id the blind.
Mm ihere have been cases wh
..I den"
i Spen-
gtfC.sanT.aia
llabiea hurt
No itog has won Uic Di.-kui
Medal, "the animals' V C nflfl
often. No dog is so frequently I
being trained lo leangi
But lor every such "tory are
just as many of dogs who have
hat
I. it tic.
down
ppened to Mr. Ceorgr
a 67-year-old bus drlvei
hat street B fortnight ag<
Attack by two
fontet-s person
these guardian animals have sud- brutally. hysterically, ^ savaged
denly turned round and bitten a *",b'*" f"d .
tas brushed against
In addition to UM boat. Di
Morice his been commissioned to
establish a permanent fisheries
experimental laboratory In the
French West Indies. Oth.-i Itaps
eontemplateii in the long range
plan for fisheries dcAclopmenl in-
clude a fishing SChOi
bonus system for the constnictn>n
| for fishermen, and a
of fishina traft
Caracas Takes
Away E
Caracas"
8. It I'- not necessary; it Is only
traditional. She wears the eoloui
nf her choice.
S. No' An Introductioi
necessary. Mention the guest's
name in advance to the servant a;
a means of indcntlfication. In lha
presence of both the guest and the
maid, the hostess might say
"Agnes will be glad to do any-
thing she can for you." If the
household is small, some sort of a
slight introduction might be made.
Ex. "Miss Bourne, this is Agnes
you've heard me speak of her
Tha motor vessel
called on Easter day to take away vou necd he|Pt cfJU on her."
more of the equipment that was
used in the construction of lha jn positively no' There's nothinfc
new runway at Sea well Airport. more irrjgitlng than to have some-
the hMBH aquincioi ',, nnv correction ir ft to la>
Whes. She is ^consigned to oortant, can be nuuJe: otherwise.
Messrs Harriman & Co.. Ltd. an intemiptlon I
i rude
He was attacked by twa Alsa-
iians. A.i he fought to protect
his throat and face, the dogs bit
his leu* and tore his trousers.
A police-sergeant had to use his
truncheon to fight them off and
i'iotect himself.
Now. according to figures issued
i the Kennel Club, the Alsatian
i: second in popularity as a pat
in this country.
The experts deny the populnr
is not rumour that the dog has a wild
wolf streak In It "Every dog."
they say, "has n trace of wolf
blood,*
Tha R.S.P.C.A. sav the Alsatian
is ]uat like any other canine -
it Is all a matter of individual
i mperament.
There are people lighting herd
to preserve the good name of the
l reed. There are just as many
. ho have b*cn badly bitten,
atlv to go Into the police court
imess box and try tn get All-
ans destroyed.
Recently an Alsatian, alone in
i iijse. rolled on a burning rug to
> ut out the Hamas. It died a fevs
ours later.
Bui some years ago In Simla thi.
Alsatians of the Rajah of Athgarh
.Hacked and ate his cousin who
went for a walk unaware that the
oogs wore loose.
them.
They aervad
Tin i e are Alsatians in this
country today who served in the
desert in wartime, who were at
parent.-, alike.
Legislation to ban them ha*
bean suggested several turn bal
on euch occasion it has been
m iratod
Why Because no one really
knows the truth about Ihe Alsu-
IU.n-l.lJ
BLOOD IMPURITIES
Many ailments arc cauaed by pour blood which
may altevt dw wnole tyHnn Skin eruption.
and irniauoo, aunplc ih*run)autai and paionil *>
loints are nature's Ugnal thai you need Cladce'a as*
Hlood Mixture. Tan fsanous rocdnux hatpt
10 cleanse the Nood rtream of impiirtties and
keep you hi and tree tton these sod aimilar
troebfcaoine coeapeanci Be asr# to eak for
CLARKE'S-^
BloodMixture
\^'^yy.-'^^^^^^^^^^.^'^^^^^^.'f^^fi^^g^^'^.'.'^^^.-t^^yt^^
MWDEltN
FARM EQUIPMENT
Maw .
TRACK, HALF-TRACK and
WHEEL TRACTORS
PLOUGHS
CANE CARTS ;
BAOASSF. SPREADERS (ideal also for
applying Filler-press Mud, Aahcs and
...nure) ______m
FERT1I.1ZF.R DISTRIBUTORS
MANURE LOADERS ____
GRASS MOWERS (Trailer St P.T.O. Types)
CRASS RAKES
CRASS LOADERS
SIDE DELIVERY RAKESlor windrowlng
Cane Trash .
and a host of other useful attachroenU
\GRICULTURAI. IMPLEMENTS
KF.Ql'IKK ON TMK-SPOT PRIOR
|TY SK.RVKIM. \M> OUR...
SPECIAL MOBILE SQUAD I'NOKR
THE PERSONAL SUPERVISION
Of MR. a D. CLARKE IS PART
OF THE AFTER-SALES SERVICE
WHICH IS ESSENTIAL.
Your Enquiries are Cardially
Invite* I
COURTESY GARAGE
ROBERT TIIOM LIMITED
Trial li.n.
While Park Road
H.E RRI N GS
FRESH o/-in TOMATO SAUCE
HA HHA IPOS 4 01H
iotto\ i w i ttis i ltd,
VWAIIII1

pack rouA
ll\l!lt\IM)S MIVIII VII
WEDNESDAY. APRIL !>. li:'
fflKBADOS
Amowii
WMtawhy. April IS. US2
COTTON sn >.!
THE ma*<>r result of bulk-bu>.ng by the
United Kingdom of certain agricultural
produce of tfie British Caribbean has been
the imp: ,.-d status of agricultural work-
ers within the nnii.
This point was well made in the Report
of the Surar Industry Commission (Jamai-
ca 1945).
"As the price of sugar can be increased
by the Ministry of Food irrespective of
market conditions, the emphasis has shifted
away from the wages which the industry
can afford to pay to the wages required to
provide for the need* of the workers."
This new policy of considering the needs
of the sugar worker has been followed eon-
Msteiuly by the British Labour Govern-
ment in the postwar years and has been
further developed by the present Conserv-
ative Government. The Conservative Gov-
ernment of the United Kingdom has not
only increased the price per ton paid to
the sugar producer by a substantial sum
but has rtiven a long term guarantee of
purchase over an 8-year period.
Any criticism of United Kingdom policy
with rrr-nrrl to tbt Untish Caribbean today
must take into account the truly handsome
treatment that the British Conservative
Government has meted out to the Colonial
(and Dominion) sugar producers. The
British Caribbean territories have not been
slow to acknowledge the generosity of such
treatment and their satisfaction has been
expressed on several occasions.
In view of the harmonious relations
which m>w exist between the sugar pro-
ducinr territories of the British Caribbean
and the United Kingdom as a result of a
realistic sugar policy it is surprising to find
the government of the United Kingdom
pursuing a far different policy with regard
to another important West Indian product
cotton.
Si i Mand Cotton was introduced into |
the British West Indies at the beginning
of this century when the competition from
bounty fed European sugar was ruining
the West Indian sugar growers. At that
pi-riod representatives of the United King-
dom Guveiimuni visited the British West
ftid.es and advised local government firstly
to improve their cultivation of cane with a
view to bringing down costs of production,
and secondly to diversify their agriculture.
Profiting by the early experiments con-
ducted by the Imperial Department of
ARricuUui.- m-St. U*oa atfd^Montterrat, a
numhef at fcirfcadidn planters planfcd IB-
acres Of eotS in 1902. By 1907-08 the
acreage under cotton had increased to 7,194
and a yield of 988,443 lbs. of lint and
2 431 778 lbs. of seed were obtained. A tew
years earlier the Barbados Cooperative
Cotton Factory began to express edible oil
from the cotton seeds and this minor in-
dustry continued today although cotton
seed was replaced by copra as the main in-
gredient during the war.
The fortune of cotton in Barbados after
its early spectacular rise to P.rom'n~
an alternative to sugar cane has gradually
waned and the island's present output ot
lint is only 6l2 tona. tUtUS
But cotton has persisted in the British
West Indies and is grown to-day m ht. Vin-
cent, Monlscrral. St. KitU.-Nevis, Barba-
dos and Antigua. The majority of West
Indian cotton is grown in Antigua where
more than 2,000 bales were produced m 1951
at a value to the island of more than
$1,000,000 (B.WO-). This year Antigua whs
planning an expansion of output and hop-
ing for a return of $2,000,000.
These hopes have been xterminated by
an announcement from the Raw Cotton
Commission which buys all the cotton im-
ported into the United Kingdom to the
effect that it cannot buy any more cotton
from Antigua.
This decision did not surprise anyone
engaged in the marketing of cotton because
the Raw Cotton Commission had for years
been making forward purchases of cotton.
But the cotton growers of the West Indies
and manufacturers in the United Kingdom
had been hoping that the purchase tax im-
posed on textiles would have been removed
by Mr Butler, the present Chancellor of
the Exchequer in the United Kingdom,
when the sales of sea island cotton products
would automatically have risen in the
United Kingdom, thereby n\ui' .:".ig *'
mand for West Indian cotton. L lit week,
Mr. Butler refused to remove pui chase tax.
Before the war when there was no pur-
chase tax one yard of shirting or pyjama
material made of Sea Island Cotton could
be bought in the United Kingdom for 2s. 3d.
Today as a result of increases in the price
of cotton, higher wages and purchase tax a
vard of Sea Island cotton material for shirts
and pyjama costs 13s. 7d. Of this consider-
able increase purchase tax represents 66!
percent., and if it were removed Sea Island
. cotton material for shirts and pyjamas
could be bought for 6s. 3d. a yard, a not
unreasonable increase over the pre-war
price.
Cotton Is one of the crops which have
helped to diversify West Indian agricul-
ture. Its introduction into the West Indies
was due to encouragement from the United
Kingdom. The reputation of West Indian
Sea Island Cotton is world-wide. It hardly
seems worthwhile killing this valuable
alternative to sugar growing for the sake
of a purchase tax which is also causing un-
employment in the United Kingdom.
The'Conservatives have shown great un-
derstanding of the West Indian case for re-
munerative prices to be paid for sunar;
they will surely sec tho point with respect
tg cotton.
the people eose to the mi i i \
1*1 I* w,la* "' ,,is influence and thane
who miighl1 inl Iimimc him ?
Consider the Queen. She has
had obvious advantages and not-
o-ebvious disadvantages In her
up-bnngmg. With the result,
that, at 25. hei matae-up w a
strange synthesis of
knowledge- iirul unworldlin*-**.
She need* in be told Mile about
Hurh subjects as eons)
law; yet she SHOWS little from
personal aaySTlSDM about the
way uf tho world.
With a high natural mtelll-
genee. however, she 1* forever
u&klng question*. And she is in
a position .to set. in general, two
eta of answers.
The first set have been domi-
nant throughout her youth. They
come from her mother, a firm
devout, duty-conscious mother,
who has Implanted a deep relig-
ious Impulse in her daughter.
Queen Elizabeth the Second
was brought up in wh.it the free
modern world might regard as a
narrow circle, and the path he>
was made to tread was the path
ut BcottaSB sobriety and strict-
ness.
Two worldly fieurcs
The second set of answers are
not necessarily different in b-isi<
content; only, perhaps, in under-
tones and overtones. They arUo
because the Queen is married,
and she naturally turns first for
informal discussion to her hus-
band, lands and elsevhcro for Philip's anxious to establish hmself as a
Philip, though bom a prince- holidays and inspired in him a public llgurc
linn. Mined the Navy and saw the naval ambition. How"* His uncle stepped in.
world He Is. aaaln, the nephew Now nobody is going to sug- He was president of the National
almost the wardof Luis and gost that the earl will us* a Playing Fields Association. Ha
Edwin.i Mountbatten, two stria- sledgehnmn.er influence "n hla arranged a banquet at the Man-
ingly worldly figures. hrphew. As has been said, Philip slon House to announce his resig-
Let us first sec what powers Is not a subject for the heavy nation m (avow of I'hiHp.
Philip possesses. father" approach; and the earl Urn handed over to Philip the
The answer is short; he has would not lend himself to it. public t*k of launching the asso-
nona. JJe has the rank of a Britrsh But he is thow He is there for clatlon's 500.000 Silver Jubilee
prince ,td the i.tles Duke of pi dip to consult in any kind of Appeal-sand then vanished from
Edinburgh Xsrl of Merioneth, uimigjami lit- rjUSM therefore the picture.
Imd Baron Oroerrwlch. all con- be considered. The Job gave Philip his first
ferred on him by the late King. Awareness *'ide contacts, his first practice as
But as the husband of tho j^^ and Edwina Mountbatten public speaker, his first good-
Queen he w still her subject, and Wl.rc I(H. lollg lhe ^[ourful lead- works Press
he will have no further title or m ot a cosmopolitan society On the accession the problem
special privileges that she herself whieh was lightly held together of Philips pjbhc work rose
does not confer. b> its taste for the chic and the f8hi And a(*l" V1* "lc*!p
He is not yet Prince Consort cnukka. stepped in It Is said that he ad-
Thi> title was givoft to Albert by LouU Mountbatten was t h e vised Philip to become the eyes
Victoria an Letters patent, but play-friend of the now Duke of and ears" of the Queen.
17 years after the marriage. Windsor, a second cousin by , ...
Even as Prince Consort Philip s blrIh indeed. "', v""*
precedence would have to be Edwina Ashley was the grand- _v_ o*.u._ t... ..,...^i *h
Seeded For AW died before d.ughter of : lr Ernest, fassel. ^ J^JS fo^SU.,
PHILIP LISTENS ... a polo field mill with the
Mountbatten*
rid* and elseveiore for Philip's
him a
___i settled. the Jewish-born financier who
Albert, of course, was nothing was Edward
like as popular as Philip when p,JVi him ,(,
he came to this country, and the ,nd a la5to f^. royalty.
Commons promptly cut a sug- When Louis and Edwina
Rested a n n u t t y of 50.000 to married. formidable combina-
E3C0O0. tlon was born. From a fabulous
VII* HoseS rle*nd ""-lud.ng the Budget, and there
Ihr Quocn m.ty riot go. Ho has
attended dinner given by Mr.
Churchill at No. 10 to the Ameri-
can Admiral HcO
And he can tell the Queen what
Vlori.. at lint, allowed him j^'u,u7e"in >ark-Ta.ie~ h y h" ^ZJ%.1'S! ZS'JS*'**
.mall part In her (onnal bu.i- ,,,,, ,hi. ,,e,atlonal >et. And '"J!SS\S^;!i!Ji>'SjM. .^
neu She wrote about w State ,,,,, Br,K)k Hu,c p,y ulk WM Philip run .id icd the llto nd
paper, "Albert helped m. with b, no mon, e^nnrd lo lnc to'et. of Pr nee Albert and
the blolt.ng-p.pr, when I gned." ,,,,,, deljed deeplnto the aeeret royal
liter the Queen broadened h,- Thm, wrtr ,hroadJ , .hought :'r'^v"- "'. 's,h"c.lcr' .."^f
reaponsibllltie. until he WU v,r- which ,olloed out etr-n.t JJ* overstep the line In con-
tually her .eereUry and most idea. There waa Intellectual in- ""n":""J! **Z ,7*. ,,.,,.,!
Intimate SdrMr. But alter his .,, | uixmr and the la-rt, But r h en the unexpected
a private HcrWr/ < the Jnd MusUni aluS u, kld ol happen.. In ernergeney ot crUUi.
death
Sovereign was appointed for the Right; but not necessarily agree- '"' "? u'rn
first time. ment. lust awareness.
to his uncle for
And the. official functions of
Consort now. ^twan >9e is a
private ecrelarr. nre undecided
They will, however, be exactly
what the Queen enooses.
Strom,' mind
With all that In mind it remains
true that Philip ean play a part
not In Influencing a particularly
M-lf-.i iin-H young ijucvri but n.
So to speak, bi-eakfflst-table dis-
(IISMMtl-.,
So let It I* said at one
l;c is a young man of cha
Ha has not the brill
i. I.i.'li ujtl. r 1U
nurd. Just awareness.
When the world moved to I a. 4
laouis Mountbatten stepped inU. i^^ZT*.. m- -
mow. He played his par! We ha,. then in IhU sertos of
In successive posthoni of para- "* ^invryed the range of
mount rasponilDtU^ and of hla SPunL cl,*e and faint' whleh
iy will judge, fhe Queen can turn when she
ii, adii played bar part, too. wishes.
with the brains of a man and The Queen, however, is self-
tha attrUmtea of *, ,iP_ peataasad i n turn of
lint.trite DttlBd She ceads avidlynews-
i they arc now. much papers, books, and official reports.
tbsir nephew's mama- She "ill no* l put off with
that age to the steps of tho throne. generalities.
L*er, It was E-irl Muunibatteti wlm A1j>s she Insists on the details
..f inn 1 ma* have conceived the Idea thai tha notives.
bJeh OBMlhav* ..tlnbuted to Philip would be a highly desir- Indeed. Mr. Churchill has been
him i .,; h. h.is ,i ueiiKth at coi f '-< EUsabam urprisad si nar grip iflabs,
mind which could make for an When the difficulty arose. Just u>th domestic and foreign,
admirable firmness of purpose. s ' had with AlUrt. that Philip \: m.v well be that, sooner th.
H. h not lightly swayed. BfUtsn, the earl made anybody thinks, she will emerge
Id has a sUj'-iig sense of family the initial arrangements for his M a completely Independent and
and he reveres one elder mem- naturalisation. . ,dcntin..Ule entity, a Queen of this
ber In particular This is his But on the impending marriage Healm to whom the advisers will
Uncle Dickie, the 51-year-old *>rl he would not be drawn. Neither bf, ^-.j to gp for advice.
Motintbatten. did he take any further steps n TWj ,cri . prepared and
Tho earl watched over Philip's MJ mailer Developments would urilUn
youth, sent him to Gordonaloun. >;'k* their own path. 0y
the Scottish public school, pro- His tank JOHN MATHER
vlded the background at Broad- After the wedding, Philip was L.E.S.
This Will Shake Them
In Texas
1^ R. M. M-cCOLL
WASHINGTON.
7 NEVER thought I should see the day
; but here it is and I can hardly* stop
lauRi.ing.
A courageous chap named Stanley Walker
(a retired newspaperman who once wrote an
uproarious book called "Mrs. Aster's Horse")
has teed off and written an article for a big
circulation magazine taking Texas and Tex-
ansall their legends and boastingcareful-
ly apart.
He starts off: "Texas has an inferiority
! complexthat's what's wrong with it" and
I takes it from there.
| The complex cracks Walker is because "The
, Texan knows that his revolver was invented
(by Colonel Samuel Colt, of Connecticut, his
! barbed wire by Joseph Glidden of Illinois.
his reaper by Cyrus McCormick. of Virgin-
ia, and his plough by the great John Deere,
of Vermont
"The Texan never invented a damned
thing."
Tra la, la.
rjEPARTMENT of Get-together between
TV and films- M.G.M. is planning to
make trailer lilms, to play for just one min-
ute on TVadvertising the company's full-
scale producis.
lOHN CROSBY, TV and radio critic for the
New York Herald-Tribune, says that al-
though immense money and effort are being
poured into new techniques of making lilms
for TV "they got worse and worse all the
time."
PUBLICATION of William Hillman's book
"Mr. President," with many hitherto
private Truman files thrown open to the pub-
lic gaze, is rather like pitching petrol into a
furnace.
The chorus of denunciation, rebuttal, alle-
gation and rejoinder, loud enough already
in Washington, rises to a frenzy and I shall
have to start wearing ear-muffs if I am to
get anf work done.
Senator Homer Capehart, a Republican,'
accuses the President of saying just after the
war that he feared England and France more
than Russia.
According to Capehart, Senator Wheeler
told Truman at the time: "You are too
optimistic about Russia." And Capehart told
the Senate ; "The President knew nothing
about Russia because he never studied that
country."
f-\\TFlSII TURNER. Black Sammy Davis,
Peter Rabbit Smith, Bucklejaws John-
sonthese are the names of some of Wash-j
ngton's more notorious dope pedlars, so a
Congress committee was told by the chief of
Washington's anti-drugs squad. And the
witness, Police Lieutenant Hiaimar Carper,
described the appearance of a typical dope
"pusher" this way : "He has long side whisk-
ers, wears a big bow-tie, a long overcoat, and
suede shoes."
The I l(Hiic s In The
Commons
LONDON. play a useful part In the welfare GraveaemU: "Will * Rt hon
In the licule ot Common* (on of the Increasing numbers of colo- Gentleman bear in mind there is
Marrli 3> Mr James Callaghan nial tdudcnl* in this country, but also a need for Increasing the
(Labour. Cardiff l a.*kcd the Sec- 1 shall try to ensure that they are number of places available to
etar*>f Stata for Foreign Affairs run with all reasonable economy." colonial MudenU ,:
whv British passports issued to Sir Edward Keeling: "Is the some kind, which are preferable
colonial seamen resident In this Secretary of State aware that the to Hie type of lodgings which Is
country, are valid for a period of AfUTel In my Question arequot- often .provided
six months only.
In a written reply, M
(Under-Secrelarjf of State)
"Seamen do not require passports
to enable lhm to pursue then
occupation or to return to thnr
home country. Seamen's identity
documents aralssued for this pur-
pose by the Ministry of Transport
or. In the case.of colonial seamen,
by the colonial authorities con-
cerned.
"When, as sometimes happen*.-ft
has to travel overland to
cd from the report of the Comp* Mr Lyttclton: "The hon.
Nutting troller and Auditor-General to Member is asking me another
"ila House?" Question, but in any case I have
Sir Hichard Acland (Labour, no Intention Of closing any more."
Ol H hi:aim:iis say
t-'umiLy Planning
, The Edlto
consequently denied the common
atmosphere tonducive to human
The Adeocaic decency ami dignity. It must ne-
cessarily follow that these children
SIR,-Much has been said must becomr vicious, physical and
Join his ship, a passport is issued against tamilj planning and birth moral degenerate!, and in due
for that specific purpose. an Us control, but different men often course begin to perpetuate th'
period cl validity- is restricted to ^ ,hf. ume UUicct Irill .im,.,. very conditions we would like to
ensure that once tins purpose has CIIt angles. Therefore. 1 hope that eradicate,
beonatrved, tha |m i iM-v.di >- - -^
leas as a travel document uiu
thf tine restriction i< lemoTCd by
the proper authority "
The subject of birth control is
Sir Edward Keeling (Consen- ,deed a controversial one. l.ut on
li..-. Twickenham!, asked_ tho atc,lUnt of its uiiDortance to th
A TERRIFIC BM in babies is going on
^ also a boom in "motels," the serve-
yourself inns for motorists.
Thoroughly alarmed by the fact that this
double trend is leaving the old-fashioned
hotel higher and dryer, hotel men are trying
to stage a come-back.
And so a concern running 22 hotels on the
Pacitic north-west coast offers to house chil-j
dren free if they are under 14 and have a
parent with them.
The hotel men think the child will remem-'
ber the place where he had such a good time i
and will return when he grows up
V|Y BREAKFASTa large orange juice.'
two boiled eggs and a pot of coffee
usually costs me 65 cents (4s. 8d.(. To-day, I
however, I drifted into the Mayflower Hotel.;
where, in the gracious "coffee shoppe,' the'
same meal totted up to $1.31 (9s. 4d.). Try-
ing to account for this added cost, the only
reason I could spot was a red velvet rope at
the entrance. Travelling salesmen queued
behind the rope waiting their turn to go in. I
qpilK HUMAN TOUCH: RUa Hay worth,
back at work on the set. has a notice upj
on her dressing-room door : "No admission
and no exceptions."
I -lull be allowed to express i
opinion very < pposite
others.
N.tture had not dealt
manv with her l,i ,ite children, for with
them in the habitat in which the
are i rthlng is provid-
ed, food, water, clothing and
shelter. \iu: with us nature has
Secretary of State for tho Colo- weffare of Birbad".""wTth which ^"hu^T^ T1". ,act fhil *t
mes whether he i- avvatt of the am a^p^ collcerned. I consider ;";' h '**'* P 7'> f *'
lo.of 1:70.115 during 1*40-51 lf H iSng instead of a curse, if P***** naedg and for those wh.
on the 11 residences for over- lhnso wno hllv,. cye, ,0 we and ? ?*S^' li JKL
SMS students administered by the -.r, , nP.r ,V)I,,ih -G through the '"' *' P*JP,'J-1 truB-fc.
BrlUsh Council ( the Colonial Tgl vIUHMTn^t^andloStt5 "'Vwf "^ to "" ^e 'itmdard
OflW. iinltldrng a lew, of 27.483 ffi" 3? ^ *hlSlned 'h? tne J /S ^S % 1^^-
in six months on the residence in S1M llf MVOrtv ,iml soualor wlO, IZS^lSSS^&^t^a
" a1*" our capacin to aupport it
support depends upon
sight of poveiK
Hani, P!^**!1---yift0"1 ."* '-heir attendant eonditic
amortisation of C78.59B spent on ,.. delinquency and c:
idapUng the building: ami if he
Stapl
will close these rfBMei
SCOTLAND'S BEST
iS
SCOTTISH
CREAM
in i \in it si on ii ii aisht
A Favourite at all The Leading
Clubs.
Ask for SCOTTISH CREAM. WHISKY
at Your Grocer.
'SSSS,','*'.Vrt'S.','.VS&*,'SSSSSSSSS*'SSr'SS*'SSSSSSSSSSH
I think th., thcy would chano 'nd"",ry Su"r
M>. Lyttetton: Hiiring 1950- their views, and agree that the We are told that emigration will
51 tho British Cotim-il admi come for some action to nolve this problem, but how can
lered seven (not'11) residences be taken In this very pressing anything els* but permanent
for col-mial students on behalf of matter to attempt to find a solu- emigration solve it? Surclv we
the Colonial Office and the kal tion of this problem and that u to know how attempts hive failed
on theso reeidenceti was 56,731. arrest the alarmlnii rate of In- mlieniblv. for the emigrant more
The net opcrotins loss of 27.485 crease in uur !H
at Hans Crescent inciudeM over- r-introduces the problem of pop-
head charges ol 7.922 for the At present there are thousands U|at1(m wo hoped he would have
first six months of tho year .,f unwanted children born into pojved.
when because of adaptation work, this life without ,mv means of sub-
no occupation nftl ixissible. For siitence whilst eich sue.-. | follow* then, that If we are
the remoining ms months tmy continues to agfl l'- thinking of a better Hart-ado* for
partial occupation was possible lem Parana and children an Uv- oui children enlightened Birth
fur the same reason. Three ot in? together in poverty and squal- Control In my opinion is our only
these residences have been closed, or as manv as six or ei| itlon.
I do not propose to dose the re- died together In n small room Yours truly.
malning four residences, which without any means of privacy and JOHN BECK
No Arrangements For
More Artisans
LONDON.
No arrangements have been made lo receive
further groups of artisans from the Colonies,
similar to those from the Gold Coast, who
are now receiving occupational training in
Britain.
This was stated in Parliament by Mr.
Oliver Lvtw-lton, answering a question
by Mr. Reginald Sorenson. Labour.
Said Mr. Lyttclton : "Consideration is not
at present bting given to further schemes for
the trun'.n; I t gnupi of artisans in the
United Kingdom, though training is ar-
ranged from time to time for individual
members as the need arises. Colonial Gov-
ernments in general rely on the local facili-
ties available to technical colleges and depart-
mental trade schools for the training of artis-
ans.
ORANGE PEKOE TEA
RED ROSE TEA
UPTON'S TEA
CHOYCE TIPS TEA ____,
CA1IHS SWEET BISCUITS
CARR'S CRACKERS
TO PLEASE
CHEDDAR
KRAFT
DUTCH
GOUDA
WITH A
BASS
WORTIIINGTON
TUBORG
GUINNESS
CANADA .DRY DRINKS
Ni-rmrnots foods
WHOLE PEAS
SPLIT PEAS
LENTILS :
OATFLAKES
SUPER RICE In Pkgs.
SPECIALS
RICH FRUIT CAKE
.96 per lb.
LOOSE TEA 1.00 per lb
COOKS PASTE
6 cents per tin
EMBASSY 25's 4 per tin
S EASY TO I-Kl I Mil
;> WEET A BIX
< SHREDDED WHEAT
S ALL BRAN
fc QUAKER OATS
C DANISH BACON
S EMPIRE COFFEE
i hone Goddard's

KEONESDAV. APRIL 16. 1S2
HVRBADOS ADVOCATE
PAGE FTVt
22 Called In Carpenter's Murder Re-trial
RIDGWAY VISITS CANADIAN FRONT
THE prosecution called on 22 witnesses at the Court of-
Grand Sessions yesterdav in order to substantiate their case
against 29-yeer-old Cyril Lash ley a carpenter of Govern-
ment Hill, St. Michael who is charged with the murder of
his reputed wife Elmina Hoyte on January 11. 1952. His
Lordship the Chief Justice Sir Allan Collymore is pres.dini,.
This ii a retrial as on the first lone, Skeete said that the knife
trial an Assize Jury failed to He saw the accused willi was a
agree whether or not Cyril Lash- shoe maker's knife. The handle
ley was guilty of the murder of f the knife was black. v.
his reputed wife Elmina Hoyte. first saw the accused with the
Defence counsel in the caae Is Mr. knife, he had it in his hip pocket.
Denis Malone and Mr. P. F. Field, ,,IS friendship with the accused
Assistant to the Attorney General ">ded on November 28. IBM. Or
is appearing for the Crown. ,n* n.ht of January 11 he me!
Of the Jurors called to sit yes- Uie ded and in the course of
terdaj the first day of the retrial \ conversation the deceased said
five were ordered to stand bv" snf, wf* no1 af.raid,r the accused
by the prosecuting counsel while ,."* llv"Jn M^ l? "* "'" "'
two were challenged by Mr. ,nen *ccul*td "* ^l1"* "*
\f.inn. 'o live as husband and wife in a
_______. house at Government Hill.
TWumii today
will call on Dr. The deceased brought a case of
i evidence about threats against the accused and
on the clothing after the case he used to see them
of the accused and the prosecution " the road together
will close Its case. To Mr. Field Skeete said that
-.,,,., ,. .. he told the deceased that he saw
Outlining the case to the Jury ,he accu)ed wlth n knif> Mr|lcr
SPSS .JS^Sfd MrHFH"S ,he d -nd he warSai thT C
toia tnem that the deceased died ceased
as a result of the multiple
wounds Indicted on her by the Charles Pilgrim of Eckstein
accused at about 8 p.m. on Jan- Village. St. Michael a bailift Mid
uary II. The evidence which the that he has known the accused
Crown will put before them Is for about eight years. He got to
divided into four categories. It know Hoyte through a Miss Tull.
appeared that the deceased had He served a notice In November
lost her husband sometime in on the accused telling him to quit "
1M9 and after that she lived with a board and shingle house. As Hill. St. Michael .said that the io|i Constable Sorin*
the accused as his reputed wife he gave the accused the notice DOOM of the deceased was quite asserted the accused
m her house at Government Hill, the accused said that he was not close to hers. On January 11 she .,'. ., "t7 __
about leaving the house cailly for he was standing In the gap and saw c ..-*?* j 7 .. K,'nntS?
had put much labour into it. He die accused with a woman come 2Kr,,T aUa,hod lo "
told the accused to leave the from the house of the deceased , .
When hearing
the prosecution
Walcott to give nil
(he stains he l
Lord Munster
Pays Visit
Seatvell
... .'v iiaa>
klOHDAT
From Page 1 m* sl. rrtek n. OoMi:
over the (jt week-end |or brief tu. j \-n- i nuw r a-aa**>
stay, has already m T'aI^^iT'aL*^
Bahamas and Jamaica. 'wSS*
He said that the object of his Ar;*, . a it**rd-Joa. a Ahduii>
visit Is t,, familiarly himself with L_, *. ***. V .'!' 1
enme of the territories in th.- ,,., m^,,,,, n mck****. j
rtMMBOl, MarkaftlM. M Miu. M Hm R Hni
Although only in the island for *; "; -^.u,,. d Water,
a few dawi haTwaa -* i,,,-^,-,. Maru\ O M>jtini A Dm'
a rew aays, h was very .Repressed K DAbr-u. a m-tv
by what he had -een and r... a
Ua Ufnt that there was a friendly
i-h seemed to prevail
"' has already met Mr. Q, H. ir.n amiii.i \
Adams. Leader of the House of J"arpn K-iahau n-- RXanaii. "!**
I) and Mr. F. i V2S?*st ^'V*"j0h""'"j'.sl'i'
Leader of the Opposlti. i JSf ^'
non io member* of the Lc, is! tlive efraro aito
Council. Bans*.... vimnu auriMMk
Askr-t what u.-a (hn .r,., f rranaa AimMiMi. Dorean foMar
iw.il Oftlec WlUl regard to Amirr B-*in. Situ JuliMU Mart*"
,,.. rM A*TU>iqiiK,
(of Hart ^TL[R T'ft f"* *i?Z''
".hat they would first have to find m^.. Himh.-t a-i^ Seeks. ii*.,r.
Every $wet is
more delicious with
BIRD'S
CUSTARD
VStl\ U4 IT I W I A
RIDINO IN A CANADIAN SCOUT At. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgwsy
(center) Bupreme Commander in the Far East, makes a tour of the
Canadian sector of the Korean front. Beslda him Is BHg. Gen. Rock-
laxfaam. ol the Canadian Brigada and. at left. Gen. James A. Van FletL
That house is situated
some feet from the road.
"They lived in this condition nousc
. tii e- illTtT C .-.v housc without any nose.
until September when they had accused said ..Jesus Christ 1
some trouble. It was alleged -.,, ,n kiii ..mil(v|v i .,|l
that the accused has assisted her fctmv labour S'^e'then l
Ihe'uved'and^at^had nrllr? to ,n* hou>e of ln dSSmmA m"
she nved and that she had prom- uad hcr jomcthing. The aecused accused told her that while h- was
the
am whaUaat the P**P** haw
wanted a dee|) water harbour. It K

that thry should have it by all
means.
> to another query with
regard to the oil rights leasing
Mtuation In Barbados, he said that
.he matter was at present occupy-
ing the attention >r the Ho\ise of
Lu-ds and was being discussed.
Asked why Serelse Kli i stu
' ffared a post In Jamai.
Assistant Secretary instead of
i Government being allowed lo return to his own
some boys Territory he said that it had noth-
body of a mg U> do with the CotoaJ kl
isu^
it.
kr. M Thvwn.
i-.ii 8 stmiu..,
CinwWI Mr>.
then
ary 11 about 8 p.m.
Ml
nthout any noise. The and go down Government Hill. """ ~ JL
am Later the deceased spoke to her SoomM ovc?
that the acciued has aitd'her BS^SSmaS^ immS ^'SE^StllSgS'A* Won He made lnquirl ,nd ""wa, purely a Dommion aff.lr\
" '^A,^" " 4h- "------- ......"-' * -n?LVL,Wl AMer^deSa^leASS^K: \,tXvt. h,'l. ,he ,NU,ed Cyril Lol Munster leave. Barbados
JSS .%E?S??..teJt. h.er- thc La.hley There were blood on ^ldy fo,- British Guiana to
stains on the coat of the accused cont.nue his tour of the islands in
*, wh. h..pProKhKl a a.: ~ Ka-- >%-- &: St.9UTiSfi'%IT* ""c'r"""-"
COM4 lh._r.tUKd lo jive him To Mr. M.lono Piljrim uld lin !h ." u.Jd
b.
speaking couiJn'l nd It ny lon.r.
mw tho Afli-r. the accused waa cauUOTWd.
anything. During the month ol lhat the notice was signed by the deceased annrnmrhln.
November the deceased went to deceased who also paid him thc tS^g'imnSl Wh- - -- *"" lu,'?ln .,h". "U^ ovsr
the Assistant Court of Appeal as money to serve the "notice,
the accused_ had put her in (or He has been convicted
hi-yS!^XT?2!J?h"V"j.'' lh" h ".>' :i looking lot lb
few *he was a neighbour of the ac- knife and th.s vaa later f.und
money ho alleged "that she owed limes but "h'.'wai never "convicted j^cd moved'"IiTa"?' fn!m 'ihV. \",''"' "" w"" ** 0ov;r^m,;",
hii.nvouTh:ii7^flfrrrhnew:t. &**" en,on -l tho gggstJB ** * a 37^-11 ^ -
nesses that immediately after On ont r-,,*, ,h a~b ,~a knifp l" Rr W,,U " for vx*m* M.
they had come out of the Court Augustus Philips, a labourer. ^^,0^ "^J^.^Tl^. ***>* f*t Mda was waT
HranfkiT Asks
Ahoul li.Mil-
In St Lu*\
il V \IV
cin.ld Clarke. Col. Raman
Mr. Ol,,., Mix Willie SVaW.
11 dui Orsnun. Mr. vw.k..
Mr l,n Nkbiwk Mr Chan..
as Ibadihj*. Mr N# n-n Wll.
far (11 AOII.OI er
Mr n-a'Kon ColmMtugc
li M4ftTtM.ll 1
Mr Orors* Rorkhahf. Mr Siphn
'lnnnn>. Mr* June Mactar>i*y
1- ,iisi..m,
MM lairtc lliunl Mr. May Manhal!
*ra Oladyi Anora\. Mr ftaivad-f
Mm rr.Ti Airofave. Ml
llrrtirrt mil Mr Drral tWalhii Mil
nor-thy Roach. Mr MKRarl a*u- Ml
Graham Haa>. Mr I'raaarlf Claimvonlf-
Mr Tortvnra KUhartli. Mr Hrn;d
ttwart, Mm Edna Slroail Mr Va.-
Morjca-vti Mr Oiivn II uR Ml
To mak sure of Uncyvwlled flavour.
crcaminess, wnooihneKS be
ccruin your cusuud is Bud'*, lor
ai long ss vou 0< jour mother
... can mnember the namr Bird'*
has been an assurance of unvarying
So sHmr yoa ask for Custartl, It's srtsa
iu atk fi- Bira's !
Dnral TThmiuh. D Warr-n J(
Mr. Nan JmvN Mr Anhil-.1 Hi
Mr Alraandat Ttkompaon. Mra 1>
rtiunv,.*.... Mr. Kanitatn HaKnea.
ASina Uillt'lh. Mr Juaa Biiiimc"
Dir.UtTt'RIS OM atjimAt
of 'Appeal certain threats were told The Court that he knew the ^"cd^sMcv and"^"aaw"tKl hn^'"1 W,Uch app,"a,x'd to ** lerday questlone.1 'the talk
made by the accused to the de- JlBIMIll Dafera ibt mmjWfM. shV^adnUred^ the piuS ^??'
J. E T. Branrkn. il.)
: si 1... I ess -
-.1
ceased "at the bottom of the On January 10 he saw the accus-
Court steps. After that disagree- ed about 7 p.m. on Welches Road.
merit the deceased refused to live He was coming out
with the accused and she went Shop. He told the accused to
and staved at her mother's house leave the deceased alone The
at the Ivy, St. Michael. Other cused then said. "Be Jesus Christ.
witnesses will tell you that other
actions and threats were, made
by the accused to thc deceased."
"On the day January It It ap-
pears that the deceased left her
home for a walk about 7 p.m.
and she went as far as Tweed-
I am going to kill her I intend
.. A. S Cato said that on Jan-
we,,,^nou. ,,^m^V'7d'^li?! "'the uary 12 he performed a post
QfaDryGoods J,.** i J .. S.. ','n Jan" mnrtrm on the dead body of
- '" u .Rt.1! f0"1 o30 pm- hp wa9 Elmln Ho>te In hli
walking along Government Hill death was due to Um
ltn other boys and heard shouts wounds received ami these
Ha SffH about 50 wounds W*N inflicted wl* a
the Department of Highways
Tianaport to proceed in full witn
i he road programme in
the Colonial
r:illl
-S3r2 'im.tc. 1952-53.
' !1,
1 l.lll a",,>S " * HVI 1 IMWIN ,.ariit BU-ail el Vn. -
lo kill her." He walked with the J,n r'- -~- m*n -,l,*?p ln'r
tabling his
i! am irastardaJ
in tin
Ckn finment
f the aunbar Ol regular "casual"
. >>!] >;. res of thc Department ot
On January 11 the next day -'na began to stab ;it Vis) u..m.ni Arnold Dalrymplc, an island Highways and Transport no un-
he heard that someone was on *TOUnd- constable said that Police Con- employed In SI. Lucy-
murdered in Government Hill. .Llhif man, ran up Ihe road by stable Springer arrested the a When..
accused to Tweedside Road wh
he left ttw accused.
. over a woman who was kniiV
>n the ground. The man then got CotiMderable force was used to
up and went away. He came back inflict some of the wounds.
l-i M M / M.4
Mr Karaal Hunral. M.lr Rai.rl
Mn AMolnriia Ihuvral. Mr*
Mr William Arv.1.., Ml
Uaiaa Uuininu. Mr* Clam Quinlerv. Ml
UWaOo, Mr* Hvmi A...,i4i,
l-b-.ni. Mr
<1u. Mr. rilaa Hani., CYM, Mm
i Cnis. Mi riadrrico Or
Sal i k.i i.vk. mim rji.
| Mr Jolt<
OHlaU M.- IJdta Nino Mr I 4 \
........ Mi lan,
d M, John 1^,. Mr HM.4U,
warp H,Sl*a. Ml Pnlrv ParoSea
i.r ri i mo an o
Mr rnncU Broatlsan. Mra ll.rrlc
III rats* l-maton. Mn
t- UaSsfl. so iim.,.1 im,. ii,
RpHS*l ... Rita dammar
WONDER
OVENS
the Reser.
. ST. I.I IIA
side Boad. Not lonn afterwaras St. Michael. This was about 7 30 ]"e "'^"" "' followed the accused and he" ahm" Mped~t~ i. ; .Irtm.-nt ..f II audM
the deceased and the acctucd P">. He went to Governm-nt Hill " ,'"?*" * ,he aecused. arrcn the aecused. The accusixl wan and Traiuport to proceed In 2"t-H"
were seen together walkin up "d saw the deceased lying dead areuaw I May wt Anally was asked about the knife ho roll with tin road projramnw In i
Government BE A rivins at In the road. He saw the accused "'2Lft-i. .?fI'!;OTr.- had. and he said that he had s, Ijlc>. env|Mfed by the Col .
19523.
The accused Lishley was finally was asked about
riui. oV.. F Springer. had. and he said Viat
the snot near the home where 'here. "iirrcd Clarke said on January thrown it behind the wall at Eiiimii.
thry hid lived as tnanaraiI wife To Mr Malone Philip, said that J" JH P-m. he was at uMi,nienl House. Th. knife E"m"'1
he accuMd attacked thc woman he has never s.w n lh,. n.rllMn [',' "IKVT GaP. with other boys, was then found by t'ollre c.i.-
S.V,-.1 M Hie :imn..l i> thc nd the aecused "plnylnj togeth- "e"uw the accraie.1 over a woman atablo Springer The accused
HKMMd Whc^ wa. ly n. on the " When he talked with the ac- "l,h. >"" The accused after- wa. then taken to District ",V
murrf on her Tck ^used on January 10. 1952 there J:"^" got up and went In Ihd l'i>li- Staiion.
ground on her Mck. was ^ Qn(_ ^^ -pre<1,nl direction of the lle.oivolr There When am*ll the aecused
He left there and went to the He knew that the accused hn.t *a!' B moon out and he recognised said "I did It. I am satisfied."
Reservoir where he spoke to the some trouble with a house. The !""klm"n > eeused Cyril Sgt rUyiui of Ih.tnrl -A" TIIK House o. Assembly
watchman and then the watch- accused said that he was going to Ji,, -V. .. .,, Police Sliition told the Court thai ya icr.lav i.fu-rnoon passed M
man saw him go to thc stand pipe kill the deceased and he was *''* Moy Ihirdlc (151 of How- the arrusod was placed "i Ihe ......itlon for the c mpulsory
where it is alleged that he wash- serious about It. I .n^T *??. B^1'1. Wlal " PoUr'' van on h'B Instructions cquisition of 72.550 squaii- t.- i ..r
ed his hands. Meanwhile a bus Forty-year-old porter Jumes "". ,,L 'l*[*'ut _'s Pm " "ikI " " dMd .9jy of a ,, ... w,,i....., II,..,1 < tha
passed that way and a policeman Herbert told thc Court that on ,,.,. "",. P"l'- on nm-ernmenl woiii.m ri Lovernmenl Hill .. v ,lf rl,|artli il. p| rj I
got off and arrested the aecused. January 11 about 4 30 pm. he met ,, "'""".,..A_w?m*" "*" ""n V" ". "St*. "T ""V*" .round ai thc user
On his arrest, the accuu^l told ,hc accused and the &Z said w, ,C ,w 23 E? "' """' ""' ..OUI"1 """*_" ':
the policeman that he did it. Th. tha, he was going , SB the J- "^1^,'.7,"^^ ..... Z2rVJ"^Z%T Rt Movln, S? pas.l.ig > th,
' "" *N H'.l
H....~ Mr
'... j,.>.,
Government To
Buy Land
iranus att bcmbat
M TKINIUAR-
Mi.
>.UI
i. cw
I'ltfcln.
''iiann. Mr
rr. Mr Kannt-lli llatnr*. Mi
iB. Mr William QrsSW. Mi.
i; n...iu.. Mr i*-ti
Mia* A.In,, tlrlffllh Mr*
Nornian Klpprr-
I I,,.,
Dr
..,..,.,.
W ARE HERE
^"S-'' AGA.N
TII'S is THE TOP-OF-TIIi
s BMUSB RO
thim; an ordinary q\ .
doks it i:tti:r, in less time
and more economically
highly efficient on cas tcrves,
GAS RINGS, OIL STOVES, Etc
ONLY $9.74 EACH.
HARRISONS
Hardware Store
Broad St.
policeman then questioned the ceased whenever he could get her. ,h. road * "" *"" w'm up 'L^.* SS . .h. hJ. "esolutk*. Ur. Cummins, who took
ITS SXLSS SS" XL", H. a uva .ccu-d u, be care- ^"g;^ Govcrnmcn, S^'yUSS,'- ft
search behind the wall of Gov- ful as a man was hanged recently. '
ernmen, House the knile was ^Jju^ ^J^h-jJ ^h.t J* . rm January, he "%>%. ^ ,.,,^ (
, when the accused said -RJnx thc charjred wilh the murdci 4 DWII then .1'"' M fl
1 have Just killed Miss Elmin.i llovte. felling the land. He h
n.^ked the accused if SI Bancroft said he wrnt lo mentioned the ftfure of *.5W).
I Mr (J II. Adam
iat th- i wiser h-id been
""You will also hear the evi- to Government Hill and saw tha p1*.0'
dence of Dr. A. S. Cato who per- flC\usf
-nd the deceased lym* dead in -

Mill
the clothing of thc
sent."
cused
iSfS\SSS%t^SSi GovcriIment"Hlii,"'si:' 'Michael" Ho *S,truc "ntl l**on * & Owinimmt fUjl ori the nlgtit of Since then the land had bee
- spoke to the accused In the acc',"*,1) MW nit* two boys January II and took thc aceuasd valuvtl b) tha Co* Bngtm
rolic van. .'aid that Mli-s Hoyte was dead to Distrkt "A" iiml thin t. tlu! n.l the CJue.*i\ S.lnit
General Hospital. He took the i,Xe,| the price i S3.600.
t Resolution was |>assed With-
First witness
ailed by the cross-examined Herbert said
prosecution was: Jha/ he was convicted tor using
Albertha Tull of the Ivy, St. indecent language. He was alM
Michael said Hoyte was her rtmviM for preten.lmg to work
daughter and she was 31 years obeah but never was convicted for
old Hoyte's husband died in ?*"""*;, Some people Call him
1948. and nhe had Uved In Gov- ^octor ^m the time he was a.
ernmenl Hill with the accused '*>}'
until Septemlwr 1951. She then W^n he spoke with the accus-
liveri with her. ***** .w.aa.no.?re prwent.
up the
Thr .niuserl then left him and clothing of the accused
went in the direction rf the pipe. WaUot' for examination.
"MoryM. Lewis"
Under Repairs
out fui'thci loniiiicm.
"Can. tonstrut'lor"
To Load Sugar
WATERFRONT activities ,c- THE motor vessel I.SUU
she (Tulli Sylvia" White. 122) Jf Covern- '"'"Ii' "' yMtemajr alter Canstrarlar Is expected lo U
went to the Assent Cou to ntent 11,11 said "I have known the 2*?** ""' KS"'l "J "'7 her. today to load l,IKn bag. .
attend hearingT in the ease In ""used lor some time and also mM '" n'?ay week-end rugar, 800 puncheon, ol tao&M
de- "he deceased. On January 11, 1 wc", "'" unloaded. ,a qu,nt,iy ol run, I.
LI *_. .. .....1... g 'I____li_ ^ II*
"eaS. STeSTSr Eog Si ~ ^ng if^'SfSi which *J-S g* ^ >- Canadian port
castwaa thrown out. After the e deceased lived. r sr.w the ?! and Frank ya, D.*. were -fl c.nadWn Camtriietee is re-
ease the daeeaaed the accused aceued and n woman come from discharging charcoal and firewood, turning to Barbados from firm i
Pmpkins were also being unload- Guiana via, Trinidad and .
and hemelf walked down the ,h^iacn,5. ' ^S AJ2F*' ,
steps in court. While on the steps ^ey went In the direction of
the aecused said "Miss Hoyte you Gov-ernmcnt H'U. Later I want
have to give me that house or by lo Co\ernment hill and saw a
Christ I will kill you" The de- crow.d *. a. P> where a woman
ceased then told a man by the
take the
name of Skeete
accused In charge.
Skeete an Island constable said
he couldn't do anything.
On January 11 the deceased
laft htr home at the Tvy for a
walk about 7 p-m. She (Tull)
next saw her daughter lying
dead In Government Hill Road
sbout 8 p.m. the same day.
The next day she went to the
Public Mortuary and identified
her daughter to Dr. A- S. Cato
The husband of the deceased died
at the age of 42. ^
To Mr Malone Tull said tha
the accused and the deceased
were friendly before they lived
toiether.
Herman Skeete said that the
accused lost a case In which he
claimed money from the deceas-
ed in the Court of Appeal. After
the case thc accused said that he
was going to kill the deceased.
The accused also said that he
helped thc deceased in "putting
away" her husband.
About 2 pm. on January 11 he
was in Carrington's Village and
he saw the accused with a knife
About 3.30 p.m. he again saw the
aecused sharpenins the knife
a piece of stone. He did not speak
to the accused.
About 7 p m he spoke to the
deceased in Carrinston s Village
and the accused came up and
stood near to them and he offered
to take the deceased to Govern-
ment Hill . ...
The deceased left him and th
accused followed her up Govern-
ment Hill. About 7.30 p.m he
saw the deceased lying dead in
the road and the accused in the
Police Vaa. ., .,
Cross-ejcamined by Mr. Ma-
lylng dead."
To Mr. M..lone White said that
she heard that thc accused had
row about a house with th
DM Nd
Naomi White of Goverr
Pu
... f.om llu' FranklyR D.R ,,., and wm ^ spending abo..
The Tlmrthy A. H. Vanelaytaam ,wo days here before soing on to
having already unloaded her Canada. She W consigned to
cargo was taking in a load of Messrs. Gardiner Austin i Co
rubble stone for British Guiana, L:d
Other ships were being pain!*.I .. ,..._.
ind refitted preparatory to sailing, finishing touches to her hull. The
If not v.vi-il but srrklnr
Salvation, please write foi
mii i: HOOK
Which Make.
GOD'S WAY
SALVATION
?LAIN"
R. Roberts. (..i,, i
Hook k Tract Service. M
Central Ave., B.iigor. M.
in 11;\
lll\t,\

TAC.f m\
BARBADOS ADVOCATr
WEDNESDAT, APRIL U. !
Talma Wants Factory Nationalized
MADI it THE MONKS OF BUCKFAST A.E'
Tells Of Hardships
EndurtM. By Peasants
The truth was. that with the
burnt canes an the around, tat
Mr. I. L. Miller iL) threw out democratic decision of the people he would say, not when it pleased he was tryina to "pile" them in
:nr suggestion to Government ih-i taken at the ballot box by using factory owners, but a medium n>t_buylna; thatr
l... s*i-.jnts hwld M used as the eeononuc weapon to try and should be struck
cane weighers so that peasants frustrate the demorratie proce*
wtMfhd !> sure oi getting j lair -nd create in the mind* and heai
deal. o( the people a sense of political agr-e -n < w* *y_^- f^ g^^ond mm which
He said that tha lot o( the fnistralion. That was why he leaKue had PfoP~*. *"* 1" worn members. -nd which the
peasants has been to be cheated felt that there was a crisis exist -
*e As v. giving tas peasant, ahort b-wrt
..,., wMfM l_l ill _-t jjIliU kasi.ss.1j Peasants canes had to remain
i,*nsn should continue to pay
raM weighers, but such weigher
nould be appointed oy a Peasants
A*oeiatrnn. If such existed. And
< it would necessarily be prowls-
tunior member fur St. George
had stressed was "that it seemed
Hivtoua that .ane-*eighers had
instruction, to carry on a scheme
oi robbing whereby, if the peasant
TOUOWING A MOTION by M. IE. T.lrn. (I.) ,- ^^ ,,. ,. fc lh ,
yesterday lhl the House >l Assembly adjourn for five ,Jmti H. w , uking Tk. pracinloi.ci. ol sucr, .nmilu
minutes to' discuss a matter of public importance the racaJesa itatcmeat whan he .said i brought up for ie>jMefl '"
Wave hardships peasants are suffering in the harvesting that, he observed, because he said. The Junior Member for St
of their crops -.1 debate ... -tint more than lour hours b.pcd to know that hi. aisle- Phlhp had abwgbroutht to.the MS ttu. th. ttrtor, owner could ,, to x or .^ M
"*"* meat was correct. There was a notice of tha House in his own i.oi alsmlss use weigher on any fanes, ha would be paid for less
,n-'ltu _-_ __- ... as during the last crop where inimitable fashion that there was -"---------- -----" ------- *-~
During his 4U minute speech. Mr. Talma suggested that voot ,,, w UMat some- a aeethlna maas of discontent, a
the Ciovcinnient should niitioii.-ilise at least une suf{ar fac- ihina like half a ton a day. luinblina. and someihlnf was
tury .i Central and big one. ui which peasants could send He hsd enquired II a prosecu- aolna to happen That was not fai
tf..'ii am And to help with the smooth working of such >'>" h:",1JwJ.br"b,C'":,'i"r",^l ",TJ^, '~ "
., scheme. QovKipwrt should provide lorries to take the JJJ * *,"ftSi "" ""mm
peasnius canes to such a foctn y. quired at the Labour Ofllce and
nn over-
i happened in England. Divis-
ional secretaries could be cane
weighers and could not be das-
There was a limit to the endur- minted On trivial grounds.
nces of the suffering maaaei of A Labour Government was not
,ust flUing mu and doing h.l(( been told that they couli not the inland, he said, and If such In power when that was passed in
peak oi the hardships the peas- nothing or rather, not taking tcaK: taith with the industry. practices were allowed to continue l Jutland and they of the House
ants were niffcniig. |hg rarthnrl OTmaOC measures wben necessary. And the same roonery was go- in order to defeat the democratic of Assembly could show the
of giving short weights for then "Don't think of the co*t of thi ln- on |n thi, cr0p again, he said, machinery of the island at some people where tha palm of sover-
canea, the circumstance of inelr sugar factory, think of the A nnr weighing Inspector, at the forthcomini. riatUoata, the monster -' -
being told that their canes would peasants". ,.Vy beginning of the crop, came or discontent would have grown
be accepted on particular day- and Hc ^ (im. cr0as a Ci* where a peasant was to yy alarmln.; P~^j'
.-IMB| i-u- u, luu ..oounm, being cheated of a third of a ton. This is u Jelloerate attempt
..I^vaw enw,^^ lu There -re oconon, when wc conaplracy to create discontent."
UDsj mat the money riede muM be lu-hlc- hr iaid. and Speaking lor St. George pereon-
. pr.vaw enterprise goes into one |h|( ^ pnf ^ ^tm 1 am satisfied dry. he said, he had dlscuased the
light excuse. It could even be and Ute cane-weigher receive _
that tha SacntUry of tha same lg bonus at the and of the year
~ifher The point was further strceaed
that this scheme
fat tar v
perpetrnted
being turned back, and the
mass of discontent whit
nmong the peasants.
...a. .. >. .Mu.Ur> ta.i. baaravat,
Uihu au I.H.UIK11: not i'j ko bj
...... -. Ud> py
.. iiv >aiU inui fasston
ui a>a Jioi da itoer. laij (obi j
Aw, anli hat IB| laid liiciu to
Ui.iifc...... .
luTii', BeCa uWOB bgtOa\ "at .oinc- .i
t.riKs
cai*as itras ana priority had to be th<
4J1V.I. lo ban
UiSUlIK
.Mr. Talma said ttiat he waPtad |>r
ma pochsX, wnlle with nauoifal- ^^ ^ ,n 0l)Vl.rnmCllt wuuiu qu*ation with one of the- blggeat
ioii, the money would oe going ^ ,*.., .dvbed if_ tiat^d ol pay- land owners of tha parish.
VC i,ll*"ury iOT Ine b*m'ul mg tbis money to inspector-, they At the baginmna; of the seaaon
""' p*op '___,. , -. collected I penny and a half for everyone was anxious to get his sroald be encouraged In any
. ?"! aT^t.^* .- ...f every ton of canes and with this
:it ui when they nationalised cmp.oy civil servants to act ger But it was obvious that all the ,*ie backbone of the community
tory. they could get a fleet ot M pane *tithen . canea could not begTound on the H- could not agree with the reefc-
Mr Mid that some cane weigher* first day or the first month even. |^s generality
Thai was a perfectly rational ax- CTai
Dealing with
-ks lor island-wide reaping of
peasants crops. If G
7"T, u -h,. hJfwT.w " beholden to factory owners That was a p
i failed to do that they would d ^^^ ot ^is were placed in plan-U.m as
brc.ki.ig one of their bu J y(.ry awkward ^^ whole output
lo why
peasant's
Hr. Mot.ley challcngeo any
non'blc member of the House to
say If he thought that Mr Man-
ning, Mi Leacock, Mr Dowding.
Mr. Pile or any of the factory
owners in this country, would put
themselves In the hands of a cane-
weigher, by making such a sug-
gesrtlon. He suggested that mem-
'jers who made such an accusation
were using the wrong yardstick
for indeed', the cane-welgher could
reverse the position and join with
the peasant to rob the factorv
owner, if as had been said, some
irresponsible, stupid person at a
thing he did agree with was factory suggested to one or two
tcrprising peasantry people "go and let Adams reap
your canes", that did not mean
that that wa* the feeling of fac-
tory owners.
Mr. Mottley said that in his own
ade by the *ev- l^Uucal Party, there wo* a*
some jealousy, and mentioned
case ln which a man lost
innty resided- right there in thai
h., mber
Perhaps, a factory could be
rut'opaliaed. if one ware natlonal-
latd it could help them to gat an
m.ighl into 'he workings of other
Hr, K- D, MeUlei i m op-
m ig th -notion said that the
the remark'-
He alw know of an iiispecto. any day he liked But the practice
could not be ground the mover of the motion, the en- I Ion campaign, telling somebod..
to draw to thg attention ol the ~jn ,' ^B_"1 Z^ '" reivsirt- thev were rixbtiiii: att-iiist was that
nb* ,,-thc M 0^iJPS?gs|^h^^ ^
S 2S*72&?i!ZT. stj^ K:IS.2 ^!
i.nl Department*, he said, ho him In a dcheate posdlon Sue
. | of the opinion that those would not be the MM .1 otell
..partmenls Jwuld be re- aeevanU were employed,
organised. Ha was taking the He added that cm.m, . .
lY.nants U>an B.it,k a* H ex- cmld be found p -V* i UM
ample whore people have had to weighers when the crop was
M for two years before tho> rnbhed.
the loan* they applied
peasants were suffcri.}k in ili<
bar vast inti of ihi
at the hands ol lbs lasftQ*| ou m i
H. too tvanled lo on*
.ittcntloii hardahis. arhlch wen-
creHled for ll. a ants by petty
henda of certain Uo\(-rnincnt IX-
artaBcnts, -i -dan i
refi-rrinjr to the paaaanta Iamh
Bank and tie f^gboui Welfare.' he
said.
It H
peasants by assuring them that
the canes could be taken on sj
particular day and then taking a
,'ioiultsh delight in telling them to
...ny them to Adams' factory.
That Was nothing short of sedition
a constltulioQ crisis.
To encourage a man to cut
down his whole income which wa*
.Mr. EH Barrow (L) also spoke lo suaU|n him for the ensuing
icmber for CThrlst Church, hi
aid that all that he had said a to
.rcusstion
uralnst the factory owners were
,,- lejaows: 'They have been ac-
customed to reaping the peasant
c..ne at a certain time of the year.
.mrf thev hove failed to do so at
Dial time this year" AH the rest
cild by him was mere hearsay.
Mr Mottley informed member*
tliat while his constituency was
"go to Mottley let him help you.
He agreed that there were still
tome "small-minded" men who
looked at life that way but as to
the canewelghers who Ln 90-; of
the cases, were all coloured .vouhk
men he thought it wa a reflection
on their character to suggest such
g conspirocv.
The hon'ble Junior member for
St. George, with his "wild cat"
scheme had suggested that Civil
Cite*
OT
h* you feel worn out. depressed, or
generally run down a gias. or two
a da/ of Bucltfait Tonic Wine will
quickly restore lost energy and
tone up the whole nervous system.
Giving new vitality it fortifies you
against fever and exhaustion and
remember. Buckfast Tonic Wine
s especially valuable
af ic r ill nest.
and then tell him
to Uke '"'** complaints but he was Wss.ho saying that Civil Servanf:'
P-Sc *S-tt S^rJSLl^tS ^o c.meVom the same strata
...jsing the peasant* to reel at lcn

that their represenUtlvef; arc no ganU .nd u^ hardships snd ,hem back because the people =
It wa. lhe.irM Um. In the . .idd that the situation was noUnng llocided |hat (here W(?rP f
natory or th-t Island that iiere Mr. Talma aaid that-b^iii oil u short of a constitutional ci.m-.. .vUd the old capitalin regime waa ..lT,r7 mwk were vindictive
W.M ?tflhcm.,"'i,. tab0Ur ' ough ''r&^nlg^dW. mean, or that
victory and tn* mmcuitie. ex- uusirv o( the island wn. undci- member who had spoken, repre-
perlenced by the pe:is.-rm were ,0llli ottv ( uie eriassj ol thu n-nted a oonatituency in which
the repercussions of ti Jouy, the Imperial CrOvarnrocii1 mere were some of the l>wsw I
No labourite-, owneil augs], f,- ranted a loan ol |t0,00 to psorit- Victories and also n very \U0
torle* and peasants sreri au^ ^ui^r factory owner, who number of peasant* and lie w.>-
insults from the factory owner loemsd a Government Agncul- WfJ moved by the eloquent
ird Hank. Those were Uw daj ieh made by his CODj
th Assembly w. half of the suffering |-camints.
t>i i>ed of planters and nier.ii.mi> ItOl only in St. George but the
>
o( iicaaanu. he Ion hart s.,,^,, be , canawtlgberr.
BUCKFAST
TOM! WIXK
TAKE HOME
BOTTLE TODAY
' They are tuiu
to Mr. X who la
tney lake Uuir Canal t .
factories," he ukL, "and as n re-
sult, their BgffkM -i"- leit In in.
ground (already eul) f"i 1*0
three Bngskl It ,.. ., I
mwir production of the
He felt that Ui. *
'.ere revenging the peasaut:. be-
cause of the results of the last limdJ
i .
tne pcaiiaiits of iheu- Unim ;
causing u wide gpntvl rjievan.c
N i.til> Lin tin i
ng. bm the m and a
will suffer." ^
The factory owners were
creating a condition winch i...i-i
be looked into.-he said lie fell
iii.,t the answel -
nn answer from a Socialist flov-
. would be 'natt.......
lion lie was of the opinion thai
pi 1< one of the best I ng n
factories which was central shnulj
be nationalised by Government
for the purpose of cslermn t-i the
pc~3an**. "They nre creating -nich
ti condition today that If nt least
illst Gnverrment doe^ not
.
flovornmcnt h,is no polli v
at bJJ."
All pent. were not -lytie.I "* ^nihing that was
rnougt to realise that tin, drier ^a wanted honourable members
Lho otoga were the more the know ,nn, nn inVPrtll[al|nK ,hr
i.i.! i> owners would benefit. Mo niatt#ri ,here was absolutely nn
Wordl DOUjd damn enough such ,|utr| ln whul mernbers had been
net..nous practice. Jy the factory -eying, "ihut factory owners were
owners. refusing to reap peasants' rnnes.
He had heard some of the U'cauw- of any Labour 'landshde'
Island as a whole factory owners aay. be said, that u; election
"That money was intended lot He wa very glad, he said, that they were not responsible, ihut
.It who wen- b. tne ugar lndu- ,m motion had originated from the, did not Instruct their man- 'J"\ trutn ff\ ",
id, Mml it *as not t,ts side of the table because it was age.s and such Uke employees to "l^^ ^mD_-
ntil i..... rhetl th, csanpWUon irown a! them that they only im.1 the peasants in thst way. >r. ^ert was J ura^ ^*P-
f the uOUM changed thai win,- represented the water front work- Yet they were somewhat rcsponai- " eatn.r inan^aj
ijcople who were In the sugar in- or. But everyone vmiUt see thnt ble and between the present and "* fa^ a ^^ |Ktufv ou,
Uistry began to hencUl fi.>ni the tliey had she pessant*' interest the next crop. Government had to g u9trition n^f year, plus the
just as much a' heart ns the in- wo. k out a scheme n which the f (tI ^af ^ne went> a moft U(._
tcrest of the Water front worker peasants could have their canes utual ammiM 0j burnt canes thl
l,. nottM a) m, tordei Men. [2jg in proportion a* early s<
her for chiist Church brought to i*"
thi
Uke last
of society as the caneweighern.
could not be bribed? Mr. Mottley
leminded the hon'ble member that
he was using the wrong yardstick.
The hon'ble junior member for
Si (irorge had quoted two esses
One of a poor old woman selling
hoi canes to Lower Estate Factory
and was "robbed" out of a half
ton. Could the member tell tin-
House how he knew that she was
r-bbed out of a half ton? Were
the canes weighed before they
went to the factory, or were they
rop brought back and wvlfhed after"
In that case then .he would not
have been robbed.
The hon'ble member also quot-
ed a case St Harrow, and said that
a case had been reported to the
Labour Officer of short weight,
.nd that no action had been taken
11. wM warning members that
Ulrtsgf they not wise lo U I
I--1 int itU turn ibati
Raj lii.i explained thnt he did
not mean for Government to
li.abl,-. But he mr.nt thai a ciwUlutl*al otlais luuay. Thar.
Hi., year. ,h,- Cuvernmrnl ^lould ft ^ "'*." '", f'
...-,. .. acquur. ll- l.,l-lu,J '''""'" '' '" "" ""' ""'" "' '
. ih.il ,i,x. year lho peasants '"^! v"""t" ',"": .... .___
MM to suitor ui the hand- v" """ "' "
the farlory owner.. ''"" " """ '," "' * "" ,vc')
honourable member who icpi.-
Seconding Mr. Talma's address, sent* country constituencies, thai
.vtr. J. c' Mottley said that he dlu when peasants take their cane<< to
.tot feel that the Government was factories utter making QartaJavar-
ting a.s responsibility range-menus to bring the time! oi
Litlvc to thc difnculty the t,uch a date and on being given
1 asanu were experiencing in tickets to certify that the canes
i .ipuig their canes. He got many will be accepted, on arriving with
i 'inplainta from peasants in St the canes, they have been told
i tlip. It eemed to him at. n they must take the canes to Mr.
I , factory owners went out <>( Adams" factory."
air way because the conservs- He wan not going to mince
. n- not returned to power, matters, he said. He had let*, in'
he hoped that the Government work >n several oeeaslons> and
mild utilise tha power that they gone to his constituency to" tind
... .u_--------._--------'lrue ^^
MB That, Mr. Mottley said, was a
. The were also cases of demnaUon of his (Mr. Miller'.)
' hreakdowns", as well as the dif- ^y^""1*1", ... 1 ,
He said he did nut agree \hat illUc4 , obtaining parts to Finally Mr Mottley .aid that
nptlonallsatlon df one fsrtory ttect repairs, therefore, when a >'members had come to me House
alone was the only way out; but 1 tory msnsger told a peasant W '", /nticlse the type of weigh
whiii. the constltuUon was u.t Ids canes and get them ready, brldgae. he would understand
im.-,it- <>"* o comc there and make
DW-ry method at then disposal to w,.I. 20 or 25 acres of burnt canes. 1^' J!,*j211..,!I!I , ^h.
gtn a lesson in democracy lo the was It not reasonable to expect Malcmenl*. calculated to do harm
capitalists of this country. would reap their burnt
The* peesaaTtry of Barbados, eanes first
from them and lessMd. He was not In agree- that the reports
peasant*) woplil be right in I i do ot with the nationalisation but correct in substanoa.
L nsviinini! did iv.i do '' t that the Government could 1-e'- them face* it. he aajjoined.
Il by the e: il rt ihis jretr. There il something about the matter He thought it was a most dgstaKi-
wa-. no point in havhl ll 'hout going to the extreme. ly thing to try to reverse the
ild not be a party to it, and
vMild record his vote against it
f he stood alone. He knew he
With all those circumstances, It would be accused of representing
was therefore not true to say that big business and capitalists, but
ted them to know that if
Digested. To the contrary, he big businesses ana) capitalists
tfculd say. that the relationship were not represented, there would
eiween capital, peasant and la- be no taxes or money for labou
>c ir was more harmonious, with ."easants or anybody else,
uie peasants. \u- labourer and the pessant get- Mr. W. A. Crawferd (C> said
IVgsants should aot allow ,i Ikg more beneALs In Barbados that sometime ago he suggested.
it'trv owner to fool them thai when compared with any other when they were considering leg-
i were doing them a favour by *< Indian colony [^*.tt0 to con,r?1 J"jh,lc "'''"
vina thoi,- - Everv ton of nc P01"' which thp senior that the manufacture of suaia-
'^ b.ouiht in to ^ uSsant ' r,ber for St. George had made should be regarded
5ru iT^enu in the ^cuWv "' whlch he rel- Th' wo* ,jt'l''>'-
prt Ihe peasant no favour when he regard the manufacture of *ugar
i, because he was es a public utility service. Factory
although they might not always
see eye to eye with the labour
Partyprobably because of life thpre WM th,, mi]i a9 hfld been
..-.viiude unuar which they had
been brought up. should still be
defended. About 17 to 20 per cent
of the island's sugar was produced
publl
ir^'S^XS^lST^L bo^-ffhu
laVlng a profit. That being so.
I .me*. So the question arose as to
when the factory owners should h(,^ Could they then argue "that quotas
gltajt the peasants'* canes. Thui u-lhoign he was making a profit
should be made to fix
for receiving peasants
Oa Page I .
TTISOITUN-SURPRISING
bow quickly badtacba, mrf.
cblog i: in or Joint..
henibago. rhoiTiatik paim and
cooirodn urinary troubles due
b> bnpuritiet In the blood can
be ovefcomc
Strong, actrie kidneyt sslc-
gusrd your healili by tr..n .i-.r
Trr.rHirifles and harmful \>a.tr>
oat of V niem. When
WJ'V ann la insdequstr tiui
bsl. io alter the Mood propcrlv.
At- your
OeeJsr
,..
Pom'. rWAacba Kidney Piaa
niA,, happy relief by hdoing
l CUnst i h hklr-y fibeai
. nd so snewiladog daiar eorin.
..,..,! rely upoa thai e>
11 town aJsreuc and asioarf
i iiiiMpik;. Many Uaouaandi of
-i ui mm and woinen lurva
Milled to Ihe good hodlh
icy have regsjaad by tilaag
i >lon' PUh.

\Jracefullv Modtm -
Vjistinctly Wolstlt?

.V*v**'***.','-'.-. '>'..;
if
lr-
t l
asaaasTBacs*;.( iidwVUU^mW
It I If a ....
HOPPER
BICYCLE

THE BARBADOS FOUNDRY LTD.
Onifcr :
MeirlianclUe:
While Park Koad
Si Mirluiel
4.120 Workshop : 4.541.
452S
MM
-B*jOgig*>t
Ai sodal e\-enU you'll see lhe.c tine can srnve
with the dignity which mawh-^ die iriagiubocni
of the occasion. When you r- sssaj a Wobelcy
you will own a car thst esp-crtes modern
tviinic as people of good taMi-- pn-fcr itin
ii'ii-( tornlotu whi,h pi. .Unn : '
in and roil while you iiavd "

DeWllt'iPllli
tp midt ipcnil) *
If you get sharp stabs of pain in
your back wben you stoop and,
at ouVr tunes, there n a dull snd
continuous ache, the cause can very
often be traced to the kidneys. These
vital organs should filter poisons oat of
the system but aoroetimcB they get
fclugKish and congested and l*
yon jiiflvr is Natures way
you that your kidneys need assistance.
A trust'd isediciiie for .his purpose i*
De Witts PUks. They have a cleaning
Sod snuMptic action on the kidneys, helping
to soothe theui, tone them up and isstor* Ibem
to function naiuially. There it a long record
of success behind De Witt's Pitts, which havr
bssa relieving iifferera in many parts of Uie
world for crer half a century.
If you could r**d even a few of the grateful
letters sent in by backache suftrren who have
found relief after taking De Witt's Pills yon
would realize that your suffering may also be
unnecessary. Why not try liveni for your
trouble? They may be uist what you need. Go
to your chenust and get a stpply nght away.
OUR GUARANTEE
De Witt's Pius
made under strictly
hygienic eondiUons
and conform to rig id
-vundard* ot purity
DE WITTS PILLS
for Kidney and Bladder Troubles
tOHT ROYAL .AH M.I l.'l'll.
Pboae 238S Sole Distributors Phou 4S04
.,-.-.-.
,-,-..-.-.-.-..-,-.
Wm. FOttARTY (ms) ITD.
TAILORS OF PROVEN RELIABILITY
AND EXCELLENT FITTERS
We catty a wide range o/
HIGHGRADE
SUITINGS
to choose Itom
\ OUR GUARANTEED itf)
cuniNG
AND
TAILORING
WILL TRANSFORM YOUR
CHOICE INTO
A si I I OF
lISTI.\i IIO.V
| Wm. FOGARTY (tns) ITD
,*---*,-,-.',-.-.'.*.*-'--.---,-*-'*-'
I

l llMsllli M'llll 16 1952
BARBADOS ADVOCATE
k
V l
Government Takes
Over Land For
Constructing Road
THE House of Assembly last ni^ht approved of Gov-
ernment's acquiring compuhorUy H'.ulO square feet of land
iieid under three separate ownerships at Foul Bay for the
Mirpose of constructing a road to provide easv access to the
Jbeach nl Foul Bay.
** land is at present held in BtrucUon of a new road on new
ir raDnring areas: 2.M sq. "
onainK lo ibe eclair ff 1 Ha opined thai if the govcrn-
titUlscd the site of the
ftrd. and 6,863 -g ft baloostni "old" road, u miiht have been
I the estate of Abel Clarke possible to have the road ioii-
eaaaad), strutted at lass expense. It was
Members ..f the "COIHian" highly possible, however, that the-
I f the OpposiUon compll- *naeri mijihi have decided that
d Government on the steps ,l www.be cheaper to construct
10 BCOVtta the road, and K"
Cl expedili- Hh^.'h*>' Proposed to acquire.
, Govern. "SS.5SfSi expres-d th.
f^t!it^r a^^TJ^ I hPc ,haI when lh* "> had been
of nptat a sh shed,| an.1 completed. Government would
JJ* en-ct a fish shed, and possibly a
; bathlnf, shed fur the convenience
V *2g "t'on Mr of Iho fishermen and those uno
** ,,U',L or baUtioa pur-
" poses.
Mi < i.iwfurd recalled how the
alter of a road ut the spot was
rnix'd by himself with members
if ihc si I'lutip Vestry in HMO.
nd bow In 1 Ml. he asked the first
quootton In tin House of Assem-
bly on the matter
if itl Ibutod the move taken
by Mr. Garner in the matter some
construction of the road time later to his (Mr. Crawford's)
CB-tant to the ilshniK asklnit bun to table it. his position
_try. because during the prcs- in the House at the time being
nshing season and last year, inch thnt he could not himself
> found that if portion bf the do so, and after suKttesUng that
were done, it would enable Government should do something
men to get U In- to preserve the surplus fish which
Is often 'thrown Into the sea", he
Wly better remuneration to urged government to act expedi-
BalvoB, ii""i-i> mi the matter.
Mr J i- Mnttley , junior Mr. I, 1>. Mllle, lE> said that
tnl"'! i' St. I v stranct' th.it in some
B-nment for bringing forward case.-. print* broaty would break
Bneasure, and said that -this down and in other cases it would
asP" ti !* .1 "C. ^ ." trough. H* was hoping that
marked from the outset with ,no nd acqui.mnn by the Gov-
feiS0. Wl ?Ll?Jl!^lrl ornment w.-uld n..t be like the
ri'vemonts changes which .,__..i p..__ ..mi.
y would vote for and from Jfr**0.*-. .T**".^ "*
many would benefit. ,h,ns, happcmnK lik. this, we
Mmtley was proud of the must feel thnt the wrong people
_ ...a. Iil- Hi a member of the " advising Government.
Be at this lime", and also He was warning Government to
ajt these changes are being be cautious because all was not
Sght about by a 1-abour Gov- well. He felt that the Govern-
Brirnt Hi expressed the hope m-"nt should acquire Randy Lane
M when the history of the Se.s- Woods and Hevwoods for making
was being written. UMN b:.thing beaches for the public.
pt be nothing done, or left uti-
the
the
hod to
hud, and added that i
bar foe St, Philip in
e (Mr. I) n Garaari wno
lour years ago ,.
at ion concerning the ixit of
1 and a road eotusacttng Foul
| With IBM
Koad Construction
i.
.1
m that they the members of
I
would be ashamed of.
"Arrohatir Foals"
fa
S pic-IM-.I 1 i<> i (in: li net t Fmil
y \. long overdue, and added
I fishermen and members of
public bad to perform "acro-
feats" to reach the beach.
n importanco of
Say to the fishing industry of
colony, ho hi>[ed that he
n have tho satisfaetido of
a that the government corn-
fad the road to the aatitfiK-tlon
i hcnellt of the community at
paid a brlbub) to tni
.i Mr. Oavner In his
tod
nd urged government

iitruttlna
ipalr the "old" ,. n,
Road. What was being st Philip to the i-inn
load leadins
me

read *h
to construct an en- ffyj. *?? ^'"T1 "* '
,d a little above the SJf t'"'" * d*'n,
MM] there must Mi Talma moved the adlmnnment of

uifludmced fn^'^.'^VheiTVani. toc" ""*""*
iibandoq the "old" f,^ nu%e ,dl4.iiit>e-l ufitll next Tuei-
rk upon the con- day i p.m.
sh n.ii I E SmlUi,
>Vh Mary H Lewli. Sch
Srh Cvtlt-rama O Sch Stall
&rh United Pllfrrlm S Sch taidy
Snelxen. M V T U lUdal, Sch l*rai>k-
:>n I> H
..KBrVMJI
Srh FRANK!.VK D R S3 tom pel.
Cbdi Sealv from BnlUh OuUna
M V CARAfAS InS ton* net. Capt
Vale-qkiei. from Trlnldaa
I.I I V. I I IK -
Srh MARION BEIJX Wf>I JT T* ton*
reft dpi Vary, tor Brtlial. Guiana.
M V CAC'IQUr del CAR1BE. 101
i i>i Tmmp. for Dominica
Srh rRANCCB W SMtTll. ?
' ILantrl. for Rntiih Oula
ttt BAIVROW M 15 torn nrt, Capl
Marki. for h; Vincenl
From Page g
canes and this in general would
insure conditions for the peasants.
With reference to the Peasants
Loan Bank and the labour Wel-
fare Fund, he agreed with Mr.
Talma that there was a lot of dis-
satisfaction. In so far as the Bank
was concerned, anyone wanting to
borrow money had to establish hl
claim and members knew the diffi-
culties which some people encount-
ered when trying to prove that tho
land on which they are living* Is
.heirs.
The ense of the Labour Welfare
Fund is similar. He was told thit
the cases where there are con-
gestion are given priority.
Mr. J. E. T. Brancker said
that the peasants In St. Lucy suff-
ered wors than pennant* of the
other parishes because of the tsao-
graphical position of St. Lucy.
lie said that factory owners
have been telling peasants to take
their canes to various members of
the House. Fortunately the appeal
of the peasants was heeded hv
the "poor people's factory" In St.
Joseph. Any shrewd businessman
could suffer a loss for a year or
two if he felt thit through that
loss he could regain the position
he formerly held.
lie said that he suggested in 1049
that Government should give
favourable consideration to thr
nurchasr of one of the factories
in St- l-ucvBroomeflcld. Before
any talk of natlonalisa'.inn. Qov-
ernment should first one rate a
factory and find out if it would
be n success.
If Government had Its own fnc-
torv trucks could bring the pea-
ants* canes from all over the
itland to this factory.
Mr. Branrkrr also suggested
'hat thev start Instituting a scheme
fo-- ".nine.
Mr. Bianckcr challenifed miv
iber of the House lo deny that
in the numerous Instance*- In which
there had been found to be dl*-
repanctck in the recorded weight
of cams they were not always in
the favour of tho factory owner
rather than the peasant.
He refer red to what he described
as "that black day" of 1047April
I7lhwhen a case of "robbery"
was discovered at a factory in St.
Lucy, and asked whether it was
not of mure than passing strange,
nr whether one believed In coinci-
dences, that such 'mi-takes'' and
"en-ors" were made In favour of
the factory owners.
He charged that the factory
owners perpetrated the "dlshon-
;ty" of the euiu* weighers in
transferring them to another office
In the -ame employ, and called It
riheer "window dressing."
Mr. Hi-anckrr said tha tho
peasants were at th0 merry of the
Candy Mix Exported
TWO thousands bags of powder-
ed eandy mix were being shipped
yesterday from the lower wharf
to the S.S. JUosrapshf-r which also
loaded sugar for the United Kin*-
dom.
The powdered candy mix which
made of arrowroot starch and
sugar at Wakefield, St. John, is
going to a firm of candy makers
in London.

factory owners, as well as vtctli
of political and economic "reac-
tlon" and "repercussions", tho
factory owners being willing to
m> i Hi" I/- a ton to victimise ln~
peasants.
He urged that Government
should make a decision in the
matter, and suggested either Ihc
zoning system whereby factories
would take the canes of all peas-
ants In a particular area, or Iho
other step of purchasing a G
eminent factory which would
grnal 1-ai.aiits' canes
He hoped that Government
would do something concrete In
tho matter In time for the next
crop season.
At B W pm Mr. F. la Waleoll
moved the aajournment of the
House until noxl Tuesday, and
this was carried steas can.
BREATHE
FREELYU
:<3lB-STUFFID NOSI...
31//CK AS A MfATMl f-wsi
CAM? FOCKirHANDWicksInlaleTwiihyou
Anytime your noac il. stuffy (mm a cold, a whiff
or two saves you cool, clear breathing imlantlv.
It'i small but packed with effective natal rnedl-
(-iU-ii. So pkasantl And Virtu Inhaler is safe
use as often as you please.
VICKS INHALER
"The Longest Wearing Tyre Ever Built"
Firestone
CLEANS AS IT LUBRICATES

tAC.r. six
BARBADOS ADVOCATF.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1. if*
Talma Wants Factory Nationalized
ADf T THE MONKS OF BUCKFASI
Tells Of Hardships
Endured IK Peasants
Mt f l_ MlHer ID threw out democratic cteoision ot the people he would say. not when il plMtd h,',V*-tI2'S5J ~s*" them to
-.tie jugv ii.ra*ni thai taken at the baUot box by using factory owner*, but a medium 1 dujuuj in*
Civil Servant* should be used as the eeonomlc weapon to try and should be struck.
g*M peasants frustrate the democratic proce Ai i giving me peasants snort
would be Bur* of jetting a fair and create in llie mindi. and heait< weight, aw OM not WjWM baarasslly
neaL of the people a sense of poi. i ** 'he tn*thod We col-
He said thai the lot of tte frustration. That was why he leanue had proponed, r
The truth
ournt ranea
peasants' can
the burn
. thai with the
the ground, the
had to remain
reaawJ
,imi ,i peasants he* been to be cheated fel thai there was a crisis exist- owner should continue to pay ( ^
, i by the scale* of some of the fee- ,ng in their constitution. * -eighers, but HM h Mgf* h-d
1 ('" h)'v tones. He wns not making Th. practitioners of such should ph-wiW be appomtecl Dy u He-aanu Hnv|fli
FOLLOWING A MOTION by Mr. C E. Ti
l;iv that Ihe House of Assembly adjnurn lor nye lorlCfc h, wm not making The prnrtfrttonera ..
minute-; Ur discuss a matter nl public importance the naattaaal statement when he -said i-e> brought up for sedition.
grave hardships peasants are suffering in the harvesting that, he observed, because he said. The Junior Member for St
of their crops a debate tasting more than four hours happened to know that his *
ment was correct. There w
aawJJd ..... rasa during the last crop where inimitable fashion that there was
During his 4U minute speech. Mr. Talma suggested that t itOOT pe^a,,! WM losing some- .. *ihing mass of discontent.
the Government should nationalise at least one sugar fac- thing like half a ton a day. rumbling, and something was
ton | C. ntnl and big one, l, which peasant* could send He had enquired if a proaecu- going to happen That was not far
m And to help with -he smooth working of such "-"tgTgM SZLSSl*** "" ^
a scheme. Government should provide lorries to take the ()one He hid a,^*^ en- There was a html to the endur-
I to such a fji quired at Ihe Labour Office and ancea of the suffering masses of
. atlon' If such existed. And
t ;e *ould necessarily be provis-
itiilip bad already brought to the it that the factory owner could
notice of the House in Ms own not dfaanias the weigher on any
slight excuse. It could even be
that the Secretary of the
ines
The iecond point
members, and which the
lember for St. George
.tressed was "that it seemed
ivious thai 1-ane-weighers had
instruction* to carry on a scheme
01 robbing whereby. If the pesant
sent in his six or eight tons of
canes, he would be paid lor lees.
and the cane-welgher receive a
ng bonus at the end of the year
union could be cane weigher f he point was further treased
*u>h happened in England. Divis- that this scheme was perpetrated
ional secretaries could be cane b" fatterv owner 1
veighcrs and could not be da*- _* .
"- Mot.ley rhalie
: jssed on trivial ground*.
A Labour Government was not
non'ble member of the
need I
- Bousa
.,(.
1 of discontent which 1:
nmong the peasants.
.. u. .Mouley Ifci. Baejgvei
10 go b.
peas-nib canes to such a lu> quired at Ihe Labour Office and ancea of the sun*.* .>- ,* Limur iwvmimwi* -* *_. ...
itea just OUlng seats and doing had 5^^ told that they could not the Island, he said, and If such in power when that was passed in "J g "ryfgL'BP 71,wdln
peak 01 uie hardships the peas- nothing or rather, not taking hTt.aK fa|(h with the industry t.ri.rllce* were allowed to continue England and they of the House A_ pfu' anv 'of the
ants were suffering, the method orastic measures when necessary Aj,.. lhe ,,. roonery was go- in order to defeat the democratic of Assembly could show the ._,.. -,, wouM ,-.,
of giving short weights tor their "Hunt think o* the co-t of the lng on m this cron aaaln, he said machinery of the island at some peopls where the palm of .over- .h-a-.iv-. ,n the handa of a cane-
cane,, uie circumstanee of melr angar factory think of the A canc wf^tn, rnspector, at the orthc-mung elections, the monster ug
being told that their canes would peasant*". ,.prv beginning of the crop, came of dUcontent would have grown chamber (lurt __lW k- goatlon He suggested that raem-
be accepted on particular days and H h H ^us ^ h- ^ across a case where a peasant was to very alarming proportion* .lutLi '.* IZ1^LJZSSmiA- b* wn0 ma uch n accusation
then be.ng turned back, and the .,17^^-^^"^ bpln C>W,l*d f thlrl ( l" "^ d#"l*W '**"?* lwS*?Sd h^tS? STgaTln * """ >"* *" yardstick
^Jft&ZnJSZZ '* are oeca-on. when we piracy to create distent." ^f ^^^X^ffuS ^^^^3^4^
oust mat the money niade mxM ^ mtoJ-ffc- hy said, "and Speakine, for St. George peraon-
Uj aiwrpnae guva u.to one |M| u one q, ,, { jatlsfled i,T) he said, he had discussed the
puclMi, wiUie with1 natUHfui. ^ ^ % {hm (j^ernmert woulu question with one of the biggest
U> money would oe BMng ^n .dvlsed if. instead of pay- land owners of the parish.
iw said mat factory own- Ihe treasury ior the bem-nt %ha mon lo inspectors, they At the boglnnlnt of the season
w* Ojo hoi u. Aar. 1 .. IdOl pea i UM people. collecled a penny and a >>alf ' everyone was anxious to gel his
MS, -no, having loid UMCS to He was suggesting to Govern- ,on ^ c.net ,nd wllh Utlf cane. IIOiind when they were big-
lag uieu -anvs at a parmui.-i meal that when they nsiwnalised f crnploy civu servanu to act ger. But il was obvious lhat all the
., .k----------,a
IV *aid that some cane weighers first day or the first month oven.
beholden to factory owner- That was a perfectly rational es-
..-.
ught lntti the workings <
factories.
Mr. L. D. MetOey fJU, in op-
pnelng the motion said that the
turn tnant oack, bul
i.iik' there wen inatauces ui 1
canes lues ni. 10 be tl
given la Mu Bthei .
instances ol dafacV m maenkfl
Mr. Talma said mat ne wanted 1
to draw to ttif Ittantion "i the
tietnbly and the island
I :<>rv. they could get a fleet <
Ltcaa lor Uland-widc reaping i
t peasant* crops. If Govern-
brcakiiui one of their big
00 that hey would ^ ^.^ of ^^ were pUlct!d ,
Shaking about the nardehips
awkward poslti
He "also knew of an inspctu.
vho had lo depend on
lighting
Assembly and Ihe isiana on a apeaxmg aoou. ue 'w""'^ ."a-ndationfmm'a factorv ownei to of deliberately misleading the
Mot. tie gravf tarttshlps which ; .miv ,xi*rienced at the h..nd. " '' That, too. wa* putting peasant* by assuring them that
"^iS^Lr^Zr^ Mm fa deliee position "
^OslmK of tht
inds ui the facimv
lit loo wanted lo draw to th
.mention hardship?, which >v
eicaled f'-r the pea by t
lieads of ccrlagq Oovcrnn*
'.1 II .nu. J.am ik- 1" u 1 dnd Hip [;>
ma ih.-i Ant
par
mot
Wolfi
lime
i u arlj
'DepartmenU, he said, he
. . of the opinion lhal those
'epartmi'iit* .hould be
iii-gaiHsed. He wus laking the
Uoaa Bank a* an cx-
ii pie where people have had to
it for two years before they
A Ihe loans they applied for.
,., H i'. cfmsing Ihe peasants to feel
their representatives are no
_ n the f*>*-"
history n' 'hit Island lhat mere jyir. Talma said that about m Ut short
was an c^'erf/helrnlnt; I.ibour i,j ^ear> ago wnen the sugar in- He
victory and tn dlfflcuHics ex- uaku-y o( Uie island wa* uudci- inembar
perlenced by the fSfasanta were oing one of the State* ot thai
Ihe repercussion' of tl ,,.lp Uu Imperial Governmcnl
No tabeai g |osn of suu.oou to plant-
toric* and peasantt w.i u rajgu lactory owners wliu
rased Government Agrn-ul-
1 ik. Those wero lltu day 1
.inn Ihe Assembly sri
..iii jiIjiiIi 1
position 8uoh 'he eane*
reverse the position and loin with
ihe peasant to rob the factory
owner. If as had been said, some
irresponsible, stupid person st a
thing he did agree with was factory suesnd to one or two
th.t an cnteiprising peasantry people "go and let Adams reap
should be encouraged In any your canes'. that did not mean
community as they were really that that was the feeling of fac-
the backbone of the community, lory'owners. ...... .,
He could not agree with the rock- Mr Mottley said that in his own
iM generality made by the sev- Political Party, there was also
oral lueeJtrti some Jealousy, and mentioned a
n nianaUon asT to why "a peasant's Dealing with the remark* of case In which a man lost an elec-
whole output could not be ground the mover of the motion, the sen- non campaign, 'riling somebody
, any day he liked. But the practice ,r member for Christ Church, he "go lo^t't>,lel(.h'm hJiL,OU|ll
SfiSTto rTeapmgharhCeT-n, >M
oanss at a certain time of the year, rnei^he thu*ht ,t wi
and thev have failed to do so at f" thdr character to
tlmt tune this year." All the rest a conspiracy.
^,id by him was mere hearsay. The hon'ble Junior member for
Mr. Mottley informed members S| George, with his "wild cat '
tl at while his constituency was ^heme had suggested that Civil
take
Ki not he the ca*e if civil particular day and then taking a
If., added th... employin
e*S be found "r such eano That was nothing short of sedition
--eiKl.er^ when the crop -a corurtitutiou crisis.
finished.
reflertior
UggC9t sucli
insults from the factory owners.
ho had spoki
tit.-a ;i oonatituency
than were eotne of the large
f.ictorles and ntao a very large
number of peasants and he w.
vary moved by the eloquent
pcech made by his Cflllaashsg at
nehalf of the suffering |K-J>;ml
not only In St. George but llu
1 kind a* whole.
That money wa* intended f> He wa very glad, he said, thai
Who eie In the sugar Indus- tiie motion had originated fron'
said, "and n was nut ,,, B|de of the table because it wai
three week*. Il Is a loss lo Uie nlu i..t,, ^hen (he complex ion thrown nl them that they only twnu r---------
ugar production of the Island.' f ,,. :.ousr .hanged tha' some ...Tvntcxl the water front work- Vt t they were (waawhat reayorwu- lJp
... at, Bui
They an ^ui .,-
to Mr. X
.ii.ir canea to On ugaii
factories," he *aid, "and as a re-
r'.;l!. their canes are lelt m Uh
ground (already cut) mi twn
whidi All peaaanti were not analytical JJJJJ' m
-'/ < iinuEb to realise that the drier He wanted honourable member*
Lhe *nos were the more the |o koow thftl on |nVeatlgailnR the
!.i,i ,ry owner* would benefit. No maUtr> there was absolutely no
word) eould damn enough *uch uth ln what member* had been
nelarlawJ praetrcwa *jy the faotory raying, -that factory owners were
,.wners. refusing to reap peasants* canes.
He hod heard some of the hocaute of any Labour- "'-
factory owners say. he said, that J{ election
trie, were not responsible, that
did not instruct their man-
laialillili
be was using the wrong yardst
The hon'ble Junior member for
St. George had quoted two cases
One of a poor old woman selling
her canes to Lower Estate Factory
and was "robbed" out of a half
ton. Could the member tell the
House how he knew that she was
1 bi>ej out of a half ton? Were
the canes weighed before they
ent to the factory, or were tin
the did not instruct their man- '
age,, and such kke employes to ",^J^*X^Jg? have been rob
tve:,t the peasant* In tlw.y. > J J" ^^,^0.^ The hon'ble
Yet they were somewhat reeponsi- SV,",.^, -- ,ho iro ,nt ed a case at H
He felt that the factoiy owners ,oj,.- who were In the 1
.ere revenging the peasant, be- juatry began (.1 M
beginning
of the results of the la-i Iltj."
They were vlctimi
the peasanu of then ratsariets and
causing b wide Spread grievance
Nvit only are UW peasants suffer-
ink. but the W ami uu u wiioW
..,.n .,., *
at)
a-ill suffer
The factorj" ownem were
creeling a condit.i
be looked into. he. said. He lei"
that the 1 penally
nn answer from a Socialist Oov-
tn.monl, would be 'nationali-.i-
llon." He was ft ihe psMtoa that
pt 1, one of th, best sugai
factories which wag central houlii
be nationalised by fiovermienl
for the purpoge of catering to the
pcsanM. "They are creating nich
rnndltin-i todav thn' if nl leasl
the Socialist Gnvcri'ment doe*; not
.1 mgar fa* I
8oelaHt| Onvornmenl h. I
st a'.l."
11 tleable. But he meant that
ils year, the Government should
ike steps to acquire Uie taeggp
thai next year the peasants
ild cease to suffer at the hand
the fnctory owner-.
warning meml
un'-e they got wise to (
i" 1 ants wuuld turn then
l from them and
peasants) would be rigl I
U Oovernmen'
ir. Th
:is n" point In hivlne. 16 labour- ithout going to the extreme.
. . lUtuUqnal cruis today. Thai
was a crisis, he said, and Ik- in-
tended Inal lo be Uie tenor of Jn-
lUong then.
'Veiy briefly." lie saki. re*
poru have ronie to me as to every
honourable member who tSSSM
Soconding Mr. Talma'., address, sents country constituenctes. that
Mr. J. C- MotUcy said thai he diu when peasants lake their canes to
not leal that the Government was factories after making ceii.nu,i
muldcrlng it* responsibuily rangemenu to bring the
el alive to Uie difficulty Ihe .uch a date and on be _
experiencing in tickets to eerlify that the canes
. ..ping their lanes. He Kot many will be accepted, on arriving with
rnplalnta from peasants In St the canes, they have been told
l .din. it seemed to him as 11 ihcy must take the cartes to Mr.
g factory owners went out of Adams' factory."
eir way because lhe conserva- He was not going to m.rn-
1 ie not returned to power, matters, he said, fie had let'. hi
He hoped that the Government work nn several occasion* ani
nl,) utilise the power lhat they gone to hi.s constituency to Hint
( ssoaaed. He was not in agree- that the reports were true ani
itb the naUonalisatiun but correct In substance,
. fe 1 that the Government c uld 1-et them face* It. he ssajomed.
omethlng about the matter He thought it was a moat da*tar
i nn- miM < -^j- --- -_--- tup Dcgiiiuiiig 01 the crop last
eryone eould -ee that bh- and between the present and j^^ WM m factory out
.s ir-ich at he:.1 as the in- wotk out a seheme in which the s M., Wftt ^^ were m mott urt.
1 of lhe water front worker. peuvurU could have their canes usuai amount of burnt canes thl
leaped in proportion ill early as >( There
possible l.ieakdowns".
He said he did not agree that .llic8 0< obtaining parts
nallonalUitlon of ime factory" TTiet repairs, therefore, when a
lone was the only way out; but f,, tory manager told a peasant *fl
when the constitution was m his canes and get them ready.
tluT-ritened they had to resort to to lind himself on Saturday night
every method at their disposal to with 20 or 25 acres of burnt cane,
give a leason i democ.acy to the was Jt not rggjonabte to^^
capttalisti
The peaasjfl^ of Barbados, canes first
ivn always
n. mi. m >a j
robbed.
member also quot-
aie at Harrow, and *id that
a case had been reported to the
Labour OAcer of short weight,
und that no action had been taken
_ That, Mr. Mottley said, was a coo-
a^ coast of demnatlon of his (Mr Miller's)
well a* the dlt- Kovemmenl.
Finally Mr. Multlev said that
if members hud come to the House
to eriticbe the type of weigh
bridges, he would understand
them, but to come there and make
Ihose "wicked and reckless'
statements, calculated to do harm
he would not be a party to It. and
would record his vote against it
if he stood alone. He knew he
Id be accused of representing
*ould reap their burnt
although they might not atsnrys W((h ^ (how> rireumrtanee,, lt .
see eye to eye with the uDour was therefore not true to ssy that hig business and capitalists, but
fortyprubably because of llfc ,n^re WM lh(, maiice a* had been he wanted them lo know that if
1 vilude under which they had .tigs^stad. To the contrary, he big businesses ana) capitalists
* uld sav, that the relaUonship were not represented, there would
ie-ween capital, peasant and la- be no taxes or money for labour.
* .r was more hsrmonlous, with i>en*ants or anybody else.
in laboi
, Im^ii brought up. should still be
? "f 23^ defended. About 17 to 20 per cent
of the IsUuuTa sugar was produced
by the peasants.
I'.-as.mK should at alto*1 I
factory owner to fool them that
they were doing them a favour by
buying their canes. Every ton of
sugar brought In by a peasant
meant 48 cent* in the raoaoay
owner's hands. Therefore there
v .is some compcUtiun for peasants'
So the question arose
nd the peasant get- Mr. W. A. Crawford said
benefits In Barbados lhat sometime ago he suggested,
wren compared with any other when they were considering leg-
WV 1 Indian colony. ulntion to control public utilities.
trie nber for St. George had made should be regarded ns a public
wfin which he agreed. That was utility,
ih the factory owner was doing He said that Uie lime is ripe to
the |ioasant no favour when he regard the manufacture of sugar
Mtiifht his canes, because he was ; a public utility service. Factory
aVIng a profit. That being so. owner* should be mad
lv
thing to try to
. .irltgn the factory owners should h(ll -ouid mey'then argue that quotas for receiving peasant!
it verse the ^rinil th peasants'* canes. Thus althodgh he wo* making a profit j On Page 7 .
IT IS OKlTiN SURPRISING .
* how qukUy baritacha. stiff, 1
scblog ouiclei or |ointi. 1
lumt'agi'. rhsunSBfeki pakn and
OBBaan unnary mxihks due
to uDpuritiei in the blood ,an
be over-orr.r
Strong, actres kidney* sale- (
Kird rour Itcalth by lUiming ,
purirrH and runnful *i*i
Out of SV sytem When
kJJii'V an.on 11 iruulcquaie an,t
u: ifilirrth< bloodoroperry.
Ait< your
O.eJ.rrW
and
lueut
tic^ueut reinuBt.
I u. .*. H-. a. be Kidney PSh
ring happy relief by helping
nng happy rehef by helping
> decue
, .1 rely upoa that well
Can dinreuc sod urinary
iiuepuc. Many Uvjiiivli ef
,,i'(ul men snd women hove
I T -

I. ... ,i i.
Cne>
OT
h* you fed worn out. depressed, or
generally run down a glass or two
s da/ of Buckfau Tonic Wine will
quickly restore lost energy jnd
tone up the whole nervous system.
Giving new vitality il fortifies you
against fever and exhaustion and
remember. Buckfait Tonic Wine
s especially valuable
alter illness.
B1ICKFAST
TONIC WIN!
TAKE HOME A BOTTLE TODAY
i0
De Witt's Pills
(ffadtweUiHyfo'
BACKACHE
LUMBAGO
SCIATICA
JOINT PAINS
RHEUMATIC
PAINS
0UI GUARANTEE
De Witt's Pills a/-
made under strictly
hygienic condibon*
and conform to rigid
standards of punty
BACKACHE
Try this for relief!
If you get sharp stabs of pain in
youi back when you stoop and.
at other times, there is a dull and
ronOnuoua ache, the cause can very
often be traced to the kidney*. These
vital organs should filter potaons oat of
Uie system but omeumrm they get
slugi'iih and congested and the bnckarhr
roa nffor Nature's way c* warning
you lhat your kidneys need assistance.
A butted medicine for this purpose n
De Witt's Pills. They have a cleansing
and anuseptic action on Uie kidneys, helping
to soothe them, tone them up and r-store them
to ftuuuon naluralry. The*e is a long record
a behind De W: ;'s PiBs, which have
been relieving sufferers in many parts of Uie
world for over half a century.
If you could rid even a few of the grate fn1
tetters sent in by backache suffereis who have
found relief alter taking De Witt's Pills you
would realize that your suffering may also be
unnecessary. Why not try them for your
trouble f They may be just vhat you need. Co
to your chemist and get a sipply right away.
DE WITTS PILLS
for Kidney and Bladder Troubles
,.--:::v.:::::-,:-.:::
.;;::-,::-s.::::::-.
Wm. FOGARTV (ran LTD.
TAILORS OF PROVEN RELIABILITY
AND EXCELLENT FITTERS
We carry a wide range of
HICHGRADE
SUITINGS
(o choose from
OUR GUARANTEED y*.
CUTTING
AND
TAILORING
WILL TRANSFORM YOUR
CHOICE INTO
A SI IT OF
IMSTIXTMI.V
Wm. FOGARTY (nn) LTD. 1
'/,',',V//.V.*/////M'///A'/.W'/.'.y-'.*-'-*.',
J
'

\\ll>\ls|l\, MMIII IC. 1*S2
IIVKIUIWI- advocate
I'M.I MVhA
Government Takes B''J**E!p
n i ^ RESULTS
Uver Land ror
E.E.C. Surpass Previous Records
Constructing Road
THK House of Assembly last nijjht approved of Gov-
ernment's aequlrini: compulsorilv 19.010 square feet of land
held under three separate ownmhlpi a: Pool Bav for thu
Crpose of constructing a road to provide easy access to the
ten at Foul Bay.
.Jw!1"!? ** at Pr^cM hel f new road on a new
the following areas: 2.889 sq. n. site.
belonging lo Ihe estate of E. S. Ii if the govcrn-
Fjeld; .4SB sq. ft. by Phoabs K. '"n\ had utilised the mv
ward, and 6,463 sq ft. belonging "old" road. U miht have been
to the estate of Abel Clarke Possible to have the roski eon-
(deeeaaed) structed at last expense. It was
Members of the Congre>n" highly possible, however, that the.
section of the Opposition conipli- engineers might have decided that
mented Government on the steps 'l wo"W be cheaper to construct
ntirely new road on the site
which they proposed to acquire,
and that was why Government
acted as they did.
Mr Crawford expressed the
hope that when the road had been
completed. Government would
h shed, and possibly a
bathing shed fur the convenience
of the fishermen and those v. no
use the beach for bathing pur-
Mr. Crawford recalled how the
roail ut the spot was
---- raised by himself with member*
"I ^ Earner) who of lhe Sl rhltl Vct)rv 1WU
four jmn ago asked a and how in 18,1.V asked the lirs
n the House of Asscm-
sUni Foul ulv on ,,. lllilUl,r *"
2 5V*!S T,xf- H- ttrlbuted the move taken
I.-..ul (onslrurtion by Mr Garner in the matter some
construction of the rood time later to his (Mr Crawford's)
Important to the fishing asking him to table it, his position
industry, bccnu5o during the pres- i:i the House at the time being
cm nanlDfl WMOQ and last year, such that he eould not himself
it was found that if portion nf the do so. and after suggesting that
it would enable Government should do something
taken to provide tho road, arid
urged Government to act expediU-
fts constriii-
Crawford suggested thai
ment should consider the possi-
bility of erecting a Its!:
nvenienee
of the people who use v
Introducing the Resolution Mr
F L Wakott,
long h id to the
spot of land. U 1
should I.
member for Si. Philip in Ihe
House
about
quest i
land
Bay v
The
was
road rar
fishermen to gel their catches
land with gn it
themselves.
Mr. J. C. Mottley
to preserve the surplus fish which
Is often 'thrown into the sea", he
urged government to act expedi-
tiously in Ihe matter.
Mr. K ll. Mottley (B) said that
member for St. Philip, lauded it was very strange that in some
Government tor bringing forward oaats, private treaty would break
%^teaTES S? *h- wa. hoping that
uttrtrmA (men 1Kb .nfsswt u,iil, mh..u*h. - w.is iiniiii( mai
?.mc\. SanaS* which 2S5' "culd -SJ* '"" "
bathing beaches for the public.
the
session is
it i
a rant
improvements changes which
many would vote for and from Bosvlgo fiasco. "When we see
which many would !.. things happening like this, we
Mr. Mottley was proud of the n*l,M f,,
fuct that he *ls a member of the * advising Government.
House at this time", and also He was warning Government lo
"that these changes are being be cautious because all was not
brought about by a labour Gov- well. He felt that the Govern-
eminent He expressed the hope m-nt should acquire Sandv Lane
that Whan the nMory of the Ses- Woods and Heywoods for making
slon was being written, there
might be nothing done, or left un-
done, that they the m
the House would be ashamed of.
"Acrobatic Feat*"
thai the road which It
was proposed to construct at Foul
long overdue, and added
ihal fishermen and members of
the public had to parfori
bade teats" t>> reach ihe beach.
In view of the Importance of
the Bay to the fishing industry of
the colony, he hoped that he
would have the satisfaction of
fining- that the government com-
(..mpirollCT lor Dav.4optr.aal
In ihe Ifouse
Yesterday
The IIoum of An
I v m.
II,. fttah)
< mrl yailatday *
ware laid by Dr.
- pagan
l
llama on which Price Control hai bnn
rvinovrd durinf ISil 2
Civil EMatilinhmam Ucnarali lAmend*
BMBSJ No 1 Order. I MI
DrvttopBiaiii and Wr Hurst in the Wnl
H4....I b, HI, Gaoiea Sari
W.r.1 Indira.
ii of the community at
large.
Ha I 0 paid I tribute to the
persistence of Mr. Garner in his
efforts to get a naiil cc
to the Bay. and urged government
lo speed up construction.
Mi F E. Miller (L) also com- .lAmmdmmii No. 1 OTlfr. ISM.'" md
mended Mr. Garner's efforts, and by ih* oovamor-in-Rsvcuiiv* committra
.nrt W.-lf^ir
Ur. Cui-
Rpsoliillon to approv* lh rain of n-
munrruion paU lo lh Chalrmon arux
iTwinberi of lha Public SMrvle* Commii-
". rlav or Match.
.i.>n> ..( mln.n 3 or
i r.4ablinhninl Art. IStf.
RaMluUon lo plar* Ihe um or S3.W0
I Hip .1I.I-...1 ,.l \b* a*n-Mnor.|n-Kar.--
IMS) lo *U)i|>! via n't thv Futi-
..'. ri II. Capital, a* ihown
in Ul* Suppk-inruurv tC-timatm. IW W.
Mr. W A. I':., . ..
H.....iin.led an AM to m*nd Ihe
Simiijc lUnk Art. 11)4
Mr. Wakoll save notice ol:-
Bill mtllDled an Act to makr pn>.
vlilon for anlitlnii the flihlnc mdiuitv
for the prof act Ion of prraona cnsasol
".alien connrcied
Evn
rsealled hli are it i" i dstenca ind
ihe rebuffs hurl* t ;.t Mr Gamer ,,'.;: ;!
Whan he mentioned the sdb)ect of
that road. He u
an) to hear
for himself the expn-
ill of his lalKiur^.
Mr. W. A. Crawford (C) said
that they were nt long last get-
ting down to the business of ac-
quiring some land for the purpose
of constructing a road laadtnl
from Foul Bay to the Public Road.
He expressed regret that the
owners of ihe land had not been
co-operative enough, knowing
he advantage of hav
the road done. M to make the land '" K.
I he i Ibvernment ^.^rsVyi "m i'PPh^;^1oTnE,,
under more reasonable conditions. Bcheetrfii to uw Biiiliillmi
Had they lieen Willing to CO-Oper- Mi J r T Branchcr tabkd o
'.. in.- Road BuUdlna
sary for the GoveniTuenl to resort ~* ~ ~y"
to the Compulsory Land Acqm
lion Act.
New Koad
He said that a number of people
In the district and he himself had
been wondering why the Govern-
ment did not repair ihe "old"
Foul Bay Road. What was being
dona now was to construct an rn-
tircly new road a little above the
original road, find there must
have been, he assumed, fairly ----
d reasons which Influenc
ernment to abandon, the "old" ths iioow ad}
i, and embark upon the con- iiav ai 3 p m__________________
GEORGETOWN. April 15.
FIRST DAY
Summer Stakes. 6 Furlongs
Class H
1. ALARM. 127, (Apham)
2. BLACK BEAUTY, 1M.
iSunich)
3. BRIGHT STEEL, 12B.
(Campbell)
1 min. 181 sees.
Ihirban Stake*. I Mile.
Claas F
1 SAGA BOY. 110. (Sunlchi
1 t'KNSIVK 124. (Campbell)
.t VIU.IONAIRE. 124, (Singh)
1 min 5 sees.
Easter Stakes. 6 Furlongs.
Class D
I. AUCTION BRIDGE. 109.
(Belle)
2 SWISS ROLL, 121, (Singh)
3. RUSHFEL, 117. (Bscklesl
1 min. 17 sees.
(uiana Stakes. 6 Furlong*.
Class A2
1. ETOILE DE FLEURS. 119.
(BeclUes)
2. ORCHIS. 129, (Wilder)
3. ISORT WALVIS. 119,
(Sunich)
I min 14f sees.
1 ...I...- Stakes. 7 Furlongs.
Class G
1 GOLD1E. 116. (Becldea)
2 UGLY, 115. (Belle)
3. GOLDEN ARROW, 120,
(Gobin)
I min. 32 sacs.
SECOND DAY
Colony Stakes. 6 Furlongs
Class A2
1. ORCHIS. 109, (Wilder)
2. ETOILE DE FLEUKS, 126.
(Beckles)
3. DOUBLE LINK. 126.
(Campbell)
Time: 1 mm: IS! sees.
Durban Handicap. 6 Furlongs.
Class F
1. SIN WATCH. 116. (Aphan)
2. GOLDEN ARROW, 112.
(Natduo)
3. SURPRISE PACKET. 122,
(Gobin)
1 min. 181 sec*.
Summer Handicap. 5 Furlongs
Class H
1. CRACKER JACK, 117.
(Patrick)
2. ALARM. 134, .'Aphan)
3. OLIVIA, 12!, (Beckles)
I min. 5| sees.
Easter Handicap. 7 Furlongs.
Class D
1. BLACK SHADOW, 128.
..(Gobin)
2. SWISS ROIX. 126. (Beckles)
3. AUCTION BRIDGE. 118.
(Belle)
1 min. 131 sees.
Presidents Stakes. Ii Furlongs
Class E
JUST BY CHANCE, 111.
(Wilder)
2. SURPRISE PACKET, 114,
(Naldoo)
3. M1UONAIRE. 119. (Singh)
1 min. 181 sees.
Directors' Stakes. 1 Mile.
Class C
1. DOWNUPSI, 124. (Belle)
2. BLACK SHADOW, 109,
(Naidoo)
3. ANNA TASAN. 112,
(Aphan)
1 min. 521 >9.
Guiana Heap Class A. Z
1. DOWNUPSI 114 (Belle)
2. ORCHIS 132 (Wilder)
3. DOUBLE LINK 120 (Camp-
bell)
1 Min. 291 sees.
Lodrr II rap One Mile Class G.
t. OLIVIA 109 (Sunwich)
2. GOLDN1E 128 (Beckles)
3. SIR LASSIE 117 (Aphan)
1 min. 54| sees,
President* II r.s,
1 TAKEN 10b (Bell)
' MILLIONAIRE 121 (Singh)
S, SAGA BOY 121 (SunricM
1 mm. 53 sees.
The thirty-third annual gener..! meeting of the English
Electric Companv. Ltd.. was held n March 27 in London
SIR tlEORGE H. NELSON. FC.G 1 M.l.Mech-E. MILE.
(Chairman and Managing Direct*.:) presided, and in the
course of his speech, said :
_ closet economic working betwsen
Turnover and production have ihe countries of lh Common-
again been substantially increased wealUVmust benefit the Common-
in volume and value during the wealth as a whole, and were en-
year and the net profit has risen couraaad by the deelarjtlon made
by 203.984 to 1.132.SS0 thus in after the meeting of thV Flrwricc
all respects creating record! over Ministers in London of theli de-
past achievement' termination to co-operate In build-
Ing iji the economic stability of
Distribution of Profits the ( .mmonwealth.
The expansion of the company'! *-
bu.iness. the rising cost, , both rJ2ur1.rompS,r.#*** n ***"* in
capital and revenue accounts, and S"K*| ^f1 *** V**?"}-
the absence of depreciation allow- "ML*** BCt , Prtngnoards from
ances adequate to meet the fall m wnic^ " results of our vast rc-
the purchasing power of the in f*^? "nu development activity
terms of the replacement of plant, ln1*nl> '^untry can be made svsil-
make it wise, in the Interests of ab '* the development of the
the shareholders, to follow a con- "eonom.c rtsources of those coun-
servative profit distribution policy. u,e* '" further the economic and
It Is proposed, therefore, t*. strateau- strength of the Common-
transfer 550,000 to the IssMral wealtii
reser\'e and lo pay a final dividend We ill continue to make every
of 10 per cent, less inccme-tax on posslbk contribution to bulhi up
the Ordinary stock for the year Industry and to fosler the ex-
^LnfJ*Ki^'r !f!' HSi1"^* ch*n*" "f ^""moditles within tho
t ? JLJ' ,"' ,divW.';r to,al Comm ..wealth so that the mler-
of 15 per cent leas income-tax. c, ,.lch nuDt Cin ^ JT
for the >ear.Jcsv.n,: Omjtnj- ,., mto ^ tr^ltomv ^ ^
.-hull and m) approach the
of A ilngle economic unit.
Continued Expansion
Overseas
. i...
forward at 477.181. which
188.434 more than las', year.
Inflation remains a serious
threat to our national economy
We wish it to be widely Vnown
that the level of pn.HU In our
company is extremely nvdent and
does not contribute to th lower- '" taiiada our subsidiary. John
ing of the purchasing power of I'"*1" Company, Ltd., raised furth-
thc . ei capital to finance Its expanding
Increased Exports bujlne-> Your company has taken
By heavy capital expenditure "P sUgMly more than Its due pro-
after the war on pltn' and te- portion of these new shares, and
search equipment, by intensive w nOw own a 54 per cent, inter-
selling efforts in our raarfcfts cat In Die Canadian group.
throughout the world, and stu-
pendous, efforts by our production In South Africa product ion at
executive!, the company has In- o"*" Bsnonl works has again in-
creased Its turnover since 1948 by creased, but costs there are still
24 million and raised the per- higher than In this country. We
ccntage of Us exports from 20 per are fortunate thai our South
cent, before the war to 50 per cent. African company continues to re-
of ,?.T*?lly. Kr*ater vjfume of celva .ubslanllal orders for power
plant, transformers and switch-
gear made in the United King-
dom.
bUaflMM ..-
W<
Working within the
Commonwealth
have always bellevt
'.h..T
Austr-lta our new factory
cit Bru>b>ino continues to increase
its output, but costs have in-
creased here too; the flow of
orders on the home works (: tn-
Australian market has stcadll)
.-ontinucd. In spite ul the new re-
strictions on Imports of domes-
tic products, there la no res tui-
tion or substantial recession u
demand (or capital goods for
which AusTalla has placed -nb-
atannal oiders with us.
Research and l>eveUpmcn'-
I have referred to some of the
fields of research and develop-
ment in which we are engaged.
To give you an overall pictu
of its measure, I would say that
we now employ about 6.000 peo-
ple, scientists, designers, engin-
eers, draughtsmen and craftsm
for our own and sponsored i
search and associated design and
development. Involving an ex-
penditure of C6> million
annum. This, of course, does not
include work on products like
hydro-electric. steam gener-
ating nor steel works plant,
which are normally des!~
suit the application.
Group Activities
The accounts of D. Napier and
Son Limited show a substantia.l}
increased net profit. The coftv
paiiy has a subttantial purt t<
play in the country's isksroia*
ment programme, uicluduig ihe
producUon of Rolls-Royce
"Avon" aero engines.
The Marconi's Wireless Tele-
graph Company Limited ami
The Marconi International
Marine Communication Company
Limited have both again had a
successful year. The Marconi
Companies' leadership of re-
search in their special electronic
field Is acknowledged all over the
world and has been maintained
in 1951.
The report and accounts were
unanimously adopted.
At a subsequent extra-ordin-
ary general meeting the proposed
Increase of the company's author-
ised capital lo 10,000.000 by
the rrt.illon of a further 2.000.000
Ordinary shares of 1 each >
approved*
Talma Wants Factory Nationalized
i.
lha rocnpuUory arqul-
.iuon of 71.SM >q l*f of land at Wt-
h*f i-riLinim pU>ina around
al Wr.lb-iry School
llemlittrfpti for lha compulaory arqui-
itMn by tha Oovarnoi -= Kxei
Coiimilifi- (if an arra of land for Uw
purpose of conaiructlna > road laadlns
from rtl Bay hrach In tha paiiih of
SI I'hilip lo tha publlr mad which rum
tram PL Mailin'* Chaprl via ftir*. to
Ihp Crane mid i. d-ianaird Highway
N
Mr Talma mowad lha adJuornmant of
Hem
ifarbour Log
In Carlisle Bay
Sch W I, r-mkU. Srh Tlmothv
A II VanaluHman. Srh HirdiUv II.
Srh n.rl I E Snulh, Srh Soa-ratW.
trh Mary M lwii Sch Burma D.
.. <> S
Srh. Unltad Pllgrun S Srh Lady
Noalivn. M V T B Badar, Sih rraiik-
ivn I> It
ASUUVAXa
Srh r*RANKI.YN O R tt tnrw nrl
M V CARACAS. IB* lona nat. Cap!
Valatqu.!. frm TrlnldaO
|.| I- M 1 I II -
Sch MARION IiriJX WOIJT. 1 ton*
r.rl, rapt Etarv. for Brltlmh Oulana.
si v rAciQi-r.
.>. C .ipt Twrnp. I..r IXnuntfa
Sili FRANCfH W ^MlTll M assi
irl CaM llaaarl. for Brill.!. Guiana
Marki. for St Vlnranl
From Page 6
canes and this in general would
insure conditions for the peasants.
With reference to the Peasants
Loan Bank and the labour Wel-
fare Fund, he agreed with Mr.
Talma that there was a lot of dis-
satisfaction. In so fir as the Bank
was concerned, anyone wanting to
borrow money had to establish hi*
claim and members knew the diffi-
culties which some people encount-
ered when trying to prove that the
land on which they are living Is
theirs.
The ease of the Labour Welfare
Fund Is similar. He was told that
the eases where there are con-
gestion are given priority.
Mr. J. E. T. Branrker
that the pensants In St. Lucy suff-
ered worm- than peaaanU ot the
other parishes because of (he geo-
graphical position of St. Lucy
He? sild that factory owners1
have been telling peasants to tak
their canes to various members of
the House. Fortunately the appeal
of the peasants was heeded hv
the "poor people's rafrtonr in st
Joseph. Any shrew" businessman
could suffer a lo*s for a year or
two if he felt (hat through that
loss he could regain the position
he formerly held.
He said that he suggested In 194S
that Government should give
favourable consideration to the
purchase of one of the factories
in St. Lucy Rroomefleld. Before
any talk of nationalisation. Gov-
ernment should first ouerate t
factory and find out if It would
be ;i success.
If Government had its own far-
torv trucks could bring the peas-
ants' canes from all over th"-
if land to this bell n
Mr Branckcr also suggested
that they start instituting a scheme
fa* '
Mr. Btancker challenged aitv
member of the House to deny thai
in the numerous instances In which
Candy Mix Exported
TWO thousands bags of powder-
ed candy mix were being shippeo
yesterday from the lower wharf
to the S.S. Biographer which also
loaded sugar for the United Kinit-
dom.
The powdered candy mix which
is made of arrowroot starch and
sugar at Wakefleld, St. John,
going to a firm of randy makei
in I*ondon.
"The Longest Wearing Tyre Ever Built"
Firestone
Charles
McEnearney
& Co., Ltd.
there had been found lo be dis-
crepancies in the recorded weight
of canex they were not always in
the favour of the factory owner
rather than the peasant.
He n i
H -th.,' black day" of 1847 -April
17thwhen a case of "rubber,"
was dl'covered at a factory In St.
Lucy, and asked whether It was
not of mure than passing strange,
or whether one believed In coinci-
dences, that such "mistakes" and
"errors" were made in favour of
the factory owners.
He i barged that the factory
owners perpetrated the "dishon-
esty^ of the cane weighers in
transferring them to another office
in the ame employ, and called it
sheer "window dressing."
Mr. Uraitcker tald that the
peasants were at tho merry of the
factory owners, as well as victl
of political and economic "reac-
tion" and "repercussions", the
factory owners being willing to
sacrifice 2/- a ton to victimise the
paaaanti
He urged thai Government
should make a derision in tho
matter, and suggested either th
zoning system whereby factories
would take the tunes of all peu*-
unU in a particular area, or the
other step of purchasing a Gov-
ernment factory which would
grind peasants' canes
He hoped that Government
would do something concrete in
tho matter in time for the next
crop season.
At Bill p.m M. K 1. W.ilroit
moved the aBjournment of the
House unlit rtexl Tuesday, and
this was carried wm een.
FREELY,..
. BW a-/i aa. 1*S ^BSSBfSSs*
:Ol"D STUFFED N0SC... ,
WICK AS A MATH I &f-
CAMY 0IT-HsJ^DYVitktlnluilerwUhyout
Anyume youi nose lecK stuflv from a cold, a whiff
or two gives you cool, clou breaihing initantly.
It'i small but ptckrd wilh effective natal medi-
cation. So pleasant) And Vlcfc* Inhaler It aafe to
use as often as you parast.
VlCKS IMHsUIR
CLEANS AS IT LUBRICATES
[Iff
EXTRA MOTOR OIL

eaperlally. was con
form, even 1
uon his pulled
was m lbs opuui n :
had a bail Bess did
in 1W5U sometmng mat must
happen to "a great* aotneUmo In De Umi Trophy. Llass Cl &
aits, career. V2 Open. K Furlong,*
I.IU'MINE.
I. LINK.
T.l'.O. Trophy. Class A imd
lnui'i. 7 I iiil-ni...
i iiac:
... il.Ul.N QUIP.
1 min. 30 sees.
Coaching i
cricket these days an,| Is carried Every summer, both India
out In < lib- and school* up and Pakistan fly players ovai fur
down the country. It hu* leen couching. The MCC team felt the
suggested thai we ire In flanaei oJ ,.ni.ct r this oa their recent tour
. Inn*;, nd players might rj. c phadkhar, the all-roundei
off If left to develop did W|, wilh both bat and ball
' "' oww in Teet matehes for India, and-in
Wiii-ii l looked In ai me chool (ho thlrd Tei( hiI B tiM cenluryi
recenUy, I law Alt, hearini the For paklsUn K^n Mohammed
ljmP n-iendly grin that has graced was constantly a thorn in the side
cricket grounds in all parts or the of the ,,?, baUmen. And in
country, and put this point to him. thP previous season again*i a
lie told me that there is coach- Commonwealth XI Imtiaz Ahman
ing. and coaching, and as in most .cored 300 runs not out in one
ihing. there U a right and a wrong innings
way of doing it The wrong srrt Bu, perhap, lhe finest adverrise-
Qlng Is when a sot style of r. ent for the nchool. is that shortly
play is forced on a player. It Just aficr tt opened in 1028 one of the
nd if it is pupu, wail a youn ^ bowler.
His name? Alf Gover
WEATHER REPORT
YESTERDAY
KainLiIl from (odrlngton;
all.
Total rainfall foe month to
yeaterday: I.?? |na.
Highest Trmperatutr
Hi r.
I""'-' Temperature:
:?.8 r.
Hind Velocity 9 miles per
hoar.
Barometer (B *.**.) Z.T
(1 p.m.) ZS.iSft.
TO-DAY
Sunrtae 5.50 a.m.
Sonaet 6.11 p.m.
Moon: Pall. AeeU 19.
Liihtlng: 6.3V pin
High Tide: LSI a.m.. 9.59
Lorn- Tide:
p.m.
1.20 .i in.. 3.1*
SUN
SHAPES
all diffrrent styles and
lyaee available
I'rnm TZ$
to aboul $!.00
call TODAY at rear
JEWELLEB8
Y. lie I.I >l A
A I'O.. LTD.
2< Broad Slml.
BePROlD
of
your
LINENS
LINEN SHEETING
SO" Hide. Yd. ... S'l
72 idt. Yd. $5.89
HEMSTITCHED
I.INEN SHEETS
W x 1" M, tUM
72" x 108" ea. ... SI8.H2
HEMSTITCHED
I.INEN PILLOW
CASES
lluusrwifr Slyle
18" s 28" n. ..... $3.77
American Ban Slyle
21" x 33" ea...... $3.31
Plain Bttto
18" x 28" ca......$2.21
CAVE SHEPHERD & CO. LTD
an not be done he said
at tempter! may prove ruinous.
But Gover believes th^f prop-
er'y applied coaching is invalu-
able and seeks to prove thU.
The Ausales' baUmen had a
Basic Mnciples
I rtBta extent KelUi
Miller, who. ue -aid. dellnltel>
I Use title, unehallenged.
ln-it all-r.>u.iil
As a sporUman lie was
alo* one of ike best In lhe fame.
To bear out Uss. n""l. be mm-
tienrd the IswUeal hi UU Isl
Inniiiif of the Isl Teat, when
Milter siaiMllnl 'not mil l tin
umpire alter Mapping up a
knimp ball. < iuisliinl unit on
te make his UglUMt I. i In
nines of lhe tour. 16 i .1 ri.i.
kaoek. fc
(hiss (.1 & *2. 4 Yenrs Old
aawj Over. Five Furlonn*-
Peppe, Wlno
Sp
Ham
Miller
best paci
| (NSW)
was the only olhei
IrUOjdiei near that
standard. Miller, t lA '''""
a better bowlei than UndwaU. * "J"1".
HP hi I rhundemtion
At the school they aim to teacl.
the fundamentals of the Lame.
I min. 45 3/5 sees. The coaching naturally varies
, ...,. *.i an. witn ,he standard of the pupil.
I moil Park Mukes. Class tI An England player Is not given
& ($2. 3 Years Old Only. the same instruction us a novice.
7 Furlong* When youngsui- oOanS Uses'
huve their elementary faults cor-
Drurs Lane ix< led, such as a desire to play
Ni w lfocket across the line of ball, instead of
1.35 playing a straight bat. They are
Urea shown how to play n straight
ll:ird:ire & Oilfield Trophy. ". n^d how to make forward
and strokes off the Lack
What is more important,
re shown when to use these
- ball Is
faster man
Johnson Fa^lest
lull Jol

jn) Pi
H<
any con-
dition H
i.itli Rl
.
|
foot.
I hey o
shobs.
Top class players, who frequent-1
ly come when they gtrUta u bad-
patella naturally do not need to bet
IWueul Slakes. Claaa Fl & 1 Bhow.'1 "'^ u**'c principles. In-1
r* stead, minor faults, which oral
often the cause of Iheir dismissal,)
ad out.
II is the MOM wilfi the bowlers.
The youngster's faults ore corroct-
td. The usual one being a tendency
to bowl square baluwsd of havkil
houldci, ,ii int.. with the
kcts. When this has been done
Ihey are laught how tP bowl the
OPINION IS ALWAYS DIVIDED REGARDING
THE SOLUTION OF WORLD PROBLEMS
BUT
THERE IS ALWAYS UNANIMITY WITH
RESPECT TO THE
HIGH QUALITY OF
MAFFEI MADE SUITS
4 Yean OW ana* Over.
Five I mii.m-s
1021 sees.
( Ming, Tr.ph>. (lass D and th
l.ouer. K Furlnnys
: I'niK-ess Kaslyya
2. Al) Babe

1.44J sees.
Neither the Master nor
Aaaprt . uif Mod] Vi" i-i
i llAKl.m A. McLEAN is
responsible for any debt or
debts contracted by the crew
while in port.
MANNING CO.. LTD..
Agents
Capt. D. J. DOUCETTE.
16 4.523n
Fr. Wm. Henry
Street
Vmine :
Vf/aprf*
C.
Wherever it may
be;there is always one
very special place to which you
go for Clothes to Suit the Occa-
sion. In Barbados, it is usually the house
of Rice on Folton Lane, for line im-
ported Menswear and Custom-Tailor-
ing.
L Rice & Co.
f Koli
leant-
Vivkwivk Rover*
Forfeit Wuith
different types of ball, leg break
off bu- ks. oetfna, Th-
asparianeg I are Mown how to im-
prove techn..|LM'
i'nc whole idea of coaching,
the yotjooj
player, u io give him experience.
it 1$ mien saul of a good young-
Mr, mat he plays like a ranrnv
'lim is frcqueni.y ttir result oi
ROVOn foifeited the
Mad Division Find- good coaching.
i .ni'ii .it The achool has Just the right
r men to mutil this experience. Alf
; rtfOetOO team nrrived early himself is in charge o) tile bowl-
aiul with batsmen below UU but TiLkv.uk Rnven did nol turn ing. The baiting la unuei iln
Aunie.- calibre came It Into hit
own. Ho
in him, Christian! said.
About Simpson Gull
tiam a il ; h< di i n very gcod Job
when called ni"
the injui
an improved wicket-lo
took on
i Um nrlei n he In
lie bowed on uM
(hotiiii rnalntali
Weal Indies team to play India.
up.
sin Hum team.
selecting some spectators played j
piaclice match-
watchful eye at Andy Sundham.
and the old Surrey and Euglanu
o*
BUILDS STRENGTH
AND
E-N-E-R-G-Y
Summerhayes
Tennis
A>k.v| ..I... i' 'ii, '
Miller |nd LllM
our bntMiien Chruitlanl said that
I < Uowinf are the fixtures foi
lhe Bumeaarbayta i-.wn Tennis
al which eonunuej
hi fiaj
MI\S ..... IIH-.
opening bat, who in his playing
career, scored over forty thousand
runs, including 107 centuries.
Herbert Strudwiek, one of the
greatest wicket-keepers ever, now
in his 73rd year, supervises the
coaching in this department.
Ciood Attendance
The .success of the school, can
be- judged by the numbers who
attend, and the fame they achieve.
1 Re-play: i ol. <> St. A. Dukd l^c^k Shacklcton, Hampshire last.
\ S. Calo vs. L. G. bowler who went with the MCC
It was onlv in U "On & A. D. Hutchinson. on their recent tour of India and
the Final Te>: ahtj I !: I W | | and J. L. PaklsU.ii. Martin Young. Glouces-
becanie Illegal.' However, Unj Parrui vS J, t'. Barker and L. A. nr opening bat, CiRbcit I'aikiiouse
4 stopped by tl of Glamorgan and Ken Ih-eslon the
""^~~~ Essex fast bowler have all attend-
The W.-sl indiw, he added v\.-i. coiruni v rAATBI|, l Prcton, who leamt nearly
well reel WU fair, rKltMULY rUUIHALL all his cricket at lhe school, was
nd UM public UAbla*) In I tMPDtl vmII meet Noire Dame regarded the greatest English fast
opinion the Weal 1 I the In a trtSndlv football fixture at bowling; prospect for years, until1
vital lour Ih Test OOl : tomorrow evening. The he had the misfortune to break
Ram and V/Ol en ill ba played to raise his leg playing football two years
Ottl bant funda for the coming Empire ago. He Is back In the game, but
Him' ill Ton, ,o AnliRii.. still feels effects of the Injury.
They'll Do It Every Time 'l ..._. By Jimmy Hatlo
^BhMWi
H ran supply Iron* storm
CR1TTALL Mill. SLIDING FOLDING DOORS
till. IDl.AL POOR I OR SIRASDAHS
The whole Door slides and (olds to oncflde.
SuppluJ in Iwo Silts .
WHh 4 leaven ' 2" wide V V hllh
Wilh 6 leavea r S" wMe .'. V V hl,h
CBITTALL FRENCH DOORS
I' *" wide . V " high
CRITTALL STF.F.L WINDOWS
Vartoiu Hldlh* and heifhu wilh or
allhoal Vrnlllalon.
'PHONE 42C7
WILKINSON &
NES CO., LTD.
NOTE : All Departments ot our btulnew will be
CLOSED on s,idtil,>. 12th April.
Bag ARE FOR'SSSES NO SEU?->
Kspecnna tough soy will pay-as
PB? EXAMPLE, MJCKLES MSCDOL4
how Z4 hours jy/MHs fSlXt
in the *g3&3%S8wmm>i&
nIP^ej saWi&uSrjTW
-.Cui in to me! i jafT ,
^A
You'd get a
Kick out of
CARIB

PAGE 1

PAGI tWO bAKBAUOS AUVOtATK WEDNESDAY, APBIL 1. 1M Ccmib CaULnq The Women's Editor Asks.. L ADY STOW of "Higl.gi.le" turned I .eetarday morning ).. ll.W.I.A ..ftcr mndiin.ida>> with her H< now J M Stow. r M.C who i at prtaM \ I Qovtmor of taw Wlndwvd n the absence of Sir Rob* erl Arunricll who is in the U K Lady St. was tn St Lucia for one wee*. Married Easter Monday M fSS MARGARET KNIGHT, younger daughter of Mi. and Mrs. Leonard Knight o( -Clifton'", Stiathrlydc. was marard on Easter Monday at St I-eonard's Chf-rh to Mr. Arthur Kirkland, elrin .-on of Mr* p. J % Urkland of Auvhenblac. Kit < ardiDcshire, Scotland They left yesterday by air for TrUndM MKl thr i" nrymoon i being spent in Trinidad. New York and Scotland. With Barclays Bank Jk#H NOKMAN ROBINSON XT*, who i* now employed witl" Barclays Bank. Grenada, left the I .s_and over the week eqd . Rodney. He is a brolher of Mr. Arthui Child. Q.C of TnnliJ.id. Impressed M RS. DOROTHEA KING. B.A., Toronto and Oxon. left for Bermuda last week by T.C.A. after paying ;i visit to the island. A member of the Social Welfare Board of Bermuda, Mrs King POCKET CAP.TC Hv OSB1 Kl I !" i M In Antigua .1 DUBUOM of the firm of Messrs i H Dubisoi. Limited. Lou, a Director of the antigU btatSsj Limited, ha* been in Antigua for the "tree -weeks. He Is sccoml ;mied by Mr. J D. Henderson of the same London firm, Mr. Henis a Director of the Antirui. fPBgar Factory Limited. llolh K-ei.-.lfmefi gave cocktail parties. I. n.bison, at Thomllnaons in respect of the staff of the Syndicates and Mr, Henderson at the 6 for their staff. Ml *enrrjfg awil?. M % trs nofni; tn PA\ IWf (o For Two Weeks AND MRS. DEORAJ SAMAROO of Trinidad, arrived here on Sunday by UW.I.A for a rest and will be lemsinmg until the end of the month stay-in., nl Indramer Guest House. Wort'.iing. Mr. Suma oo who is a promi.  -ni.iii % 1 S III Fei nandn i veil known in Barbados having visited here on several occasions. He was last here Guianese Medico ,n M J£,' or £ "jr I f-VH A P LACHHMAN SINGH Utl t0 3t Vinctn t-/l,. pant of the BG Ea,t AMONG the passengers lsawSlndian Association and all' ** ln J " Sunday night by the iPr^-ktent of the Otii;.n:. lndii-% % % > Redmey on a visit to St % in .1 Workers Union left for Vincent were Dr C. O Y. Lowe jTnmdad by B.W.I.A. DVfll the Chiropractor of Bay Street and % Ret paving a visit to Mrs. Lowe. They were accom% mr'nted panied bv their daughter Miss D. Loare(.'derations Manager T.C.A. MAURICE MCGREGOR, What are the four isaitntisli of giving a formal tea? When u it necessary to pay visit? Are people who live in small towns coossdarcd more saofchi-h than those Who live % cities? Is It pensUssifeOe when al tables in a crowded rrstaursnV are in use to ask str.inerif one may sit with them? Is It ever correct for an em-i ployer to call the employee By his or her first name? At the beginning of a formal dinner, what 1* the position of the service plate and the cutlery that accompanies I; a woman considered rogant and contemptible fa, gentlemim when she refuses to thank him for "opening door" or doing other small eourtesy for her* Why is i| necessary for a debutante 1o wear white at her coming-out party? Should one introduce a servant to a member of the family or tn a guest? If a story Is being told, should a second person interrupt .tad make corrections or help TMI the mcidenp ^ 'the island !i> % % b> his wilt. | While here Dr. and Mrs. itaying at % rthing. ERROL FLYNN'S W.I. ISLAND J Spent Tei Mar __ w HOLLYWOOD .r^w Fl>nn, the (Urn tUr. has Ten Days WR AND MRS MORRIS .1 .^si?g?^ : M R F Operauoo seas Services Airlines who u on ft rwr^rwx plTaXv ^^ H has three houw S2S--S ^n.-r'V.^X tSifeSS vSlWJR-EX .5J?^ N by B.W.I A. They were 'laying Bl Ihf Hotel Royal. Mr. Rogers is Governing Ditor of Rogers and Howe Ltd.. bW 1 wouidn't llveThere"f*or ever' Punch Picked Odd Flowers  He Caffterec/ Raiay-Daifies. Carperum'as By MAX TBELL -LOOK!" 11 an id. the shadow-girl stitb the turned-about name, exclaimed to Mr. Punch. "Just look at all the beautiful flowers Tvs picked!" Mr. Punch glance J at the large oouquet Uacnal was holding. There *ere daisies and b1ck-eyed tossns net lady's-shpoers and mm flowers Sh4 ansp-drsgons and wil^ roses aio tiger lilies. "Very pretrj," r% sarksd Mr. r*nnch "No. there's nothing more pretty than a bouquet of flowers. Dear me. seeing all those flowar* that you're Jost picked. ITanM, reminds me of the flowers 1 mad te pick for my mother when I was a boy." "Oh!" said Hanid, who had never heard Mr. Punch talk of the flowers ha had ever picked for his mother. "Were they flowers like thee?" Qalte Diflereal Mr. Puaess shook his head. "No, they were quite different. In fact," ha went on. "1 don't think anyone ever picked the kind of flowers that ( did. I remember one dsy I wandered along; tha edge of the woods picking nothing but lamp-posies. 1 "Lamp-posies?" said Ranid with i |iMiled expression. "What kind of flowers are thoy, Mr."T*unch?" "Well, they are tall and they r.ave a large blossom shaped like a lamp on top. They look." he added, "almost exactly like little lampposts. And they are very pretty to look at In the dark with alt their imps burning." For mil white HIHH>H  Teey pretty." Mr. Paaea said. ly like brooms, with their stalks up ia the air and their flowers on the llte n sa, and you'd And them standing in s corner of the kitchen." Tvnet aueer flowers!" said HanId. "And," continued Mr. Punch, "there were the milk-bottlchlie*. and the rainy-daisies and the lookbMfrflasstera and the alphabeltereups. And, of course, there were alwayi. the wallpaper-flower* and the earpetunias and the climbing Bteiroee* that went upstslrs and dewnstairs. Nicest Flewere "But the swsetest snd nicest flowers ef sIV * Mr. Punch, "ware the hloe door-bells! What a lovely tlnr-a-ling they had! And Vihuc shoes, to pass muster in company, must be spotless, immaculate. Use Propert's White Reaovsto or Propert'i Shuwhite. No safer way of making sure lhat white ihoes arc while f PROPERTY SMUWUITE* WHITE RENOVATOR In Qmtam Ml* SPOTV* ',>, FOR HOT-HOT DAYS USE COOL-COOL TALC island." he says B*M MnnlhBu Frlftrf. S Wr, and Hi Islled the Oovernment Inrccloi % ^pain. Tr: After Two A FTER spending about tw< months holiday staying ot the Cosmopolitan Guest House. Hay Street, Dr. Kenneth Wray and Mr. Nathaniel Hinds of Brflsfa fluwi % returned home on W.i Cricket Board of Contro Back from Trinidad "I'm raising cattle. I also built M R. W ANTHONY of Mnrcsnl church on the Islandput up 50 Beach Club returned from K". r cpni 9f *"'* money to build . by BW.I.A. after payHS* !" .!* 1 *" IO . and relax, irsg n short siaH to the Island. For Cricket Board Meet M R. F A. C CLAIHMONTE left (or Trinidad on Monday British i meeting of the the Children^ % and other slmi1 b) th. KM S. Ladv Dental Surgeon is Managing DiSosp und Oil Hinds % c; T.L.L. Employee M R. MAX MARSHAl.l Trinidad Leaseholds Ltd. i turned to Trinidad on Sunday by B.W.I A. nfler ^prndlng a noliOn Way fo U.S.A. .1iMn.ll School Goodwill LCMUI Inr in..tltutlons. Sho WHS impressed by Ihe So1 MM! WpKare work beinj rnrV> KIN .-.ii |ilidliiB lTl-Corrdyn" Maxwells who led led out in Barbados. She also (he WUIvffl Barbados left for tor Trinidad on Thursday to -oiMiilered Barbados a beautiful Trinidad Of. ,,-eek end by spsnd Ihe Baiter holiday, esld and as yet unspoilt by BW.I.A Dot .' tlda on his way peeta to return home early next back to the U.S.A. week. Reluming Next Week WB CHAHIJK PTTERKIN Ranid waa salonUhed to hsar I tow basotiftuly th7 "" "!;' n about this rtnuije flower. -And I erst anyotis eso to the door^ .vhat othsr kind, did you plek. Mr Mr. Punch smiled. 1 i.h .1 Punch f* ah. aaked. nV > !" i ,I..M the ordinary table wine, and Tax the payroll, tax the sale, there Is a Grand Premier Cm, Tax his hard-earned paper kali with more sparkle to It, Of the Tux hU pipe and tax his smoke % him Burgundy rather than the Claret type, il gtrai nff no -mill, and % i urik with any dish from ardines (.< i.v-, icani li has j not unpleasant after-taste of rochineal. a substance that gives it Ihst charming vln rsse tint." Tax flim Tax his head, tax hi. hide. let Ihe government officials ride Tnx his tow, tax her calf. Teach I t1( tfirvcrnmont i tbi Jok' iii' ., lie KUnllghl if you living, lx the deed, -frog through apaco, using a Bf floallrig inlands, each 39.171 miles apart. The first ..l-ujcL QiBde of bntiite, bdellium, snadl TsVaWOTcod cagnlte would be shot from a rocket on Flambor'iiuh Head. A second Island  shot from the llrst and so on. Bach island would le magnetised by its predeL'cssor and th Tax the unborn ere they're fed. anchored in the ; trnlonphcrc. The i.ix their asVOUds, sage' minks this could be done j beyond t h ,. % i .. % ad BM mMWlM* 10s. ..jd. After that ra s t l aai ind lax thi-m will, immkind can tackle Ihe sun. As the gi.te of hell. Pascal would say. all man s by trouble comes from his inability M. ('. smith, t -h.it titmoga. Tenn. t.. remain quietly on onepjancl. Tag hU coffin. Tax their sot i Lottos' T.ix them all Tax i iii-it. to TO-DAYS DARGAMi\ STRIPED RAYON SUITINGS 54" Navy. Brown. Grey OPENING SHORTLY . PLAIN TROPICALS 54" Navy, Brown, Cream HE SHALL BE OPENING \l.|. DAY ON THURSDAY. APRIL 10TII. AND OPENING ON SATURDAY. APRIL 12TH AT 9 O'CLOCK, AND CLOSING AT 1 O'CLOCK. T. R. EVANS & WHITFIELDS DIAL 4220 YOUR SHOE STORES YOI HI; < H I; \ I IXI. IOI IISI I.I OI I;YI;II\HUM. IF YOI MISS THESE TWO oi isiixinxi, ni.Msar Al IHE PI AZ 4 THEATRES % ssaBsai i % (BM.,I sire, IIHIIM. >... % a) III Thr /brrrn,-*/ Th* fftui... Thr % Ormmm or at* itw/ near *to... aoaaaa XUIH ijANEWYMAN in THE \3LU£ VEIL JfenJ W(s Vte-a) j, bj HUW WrD'.CC. HOWriftO ^HIDtt MVI JOHN CAM ftritwd U W*S.l T B"".N r-rt tad b. BOMUT ARllIU* OVaMKQ IKIDAV IC A g.3u pu and i ONTIM |\(. 1^,1, OPENING Tilt RS. It4% 8.1* P.M. Also PatasssftY 2.sa 4.4S & S.1D I'.M. and CONTTNI'IM; f>all> 41*. A R.SO P.M. DIAL V**V>V>V*V",*V>t>V^^

PAGE 1

.WI.Msl.xy APRIL II. 1M2 BARBADOS ADVOCATE PAGE THREE France Builds Special Fishing Boat For Caribbean Will Be Ready Next Summer PORT-OF-SPAIN. c rr y one 8,e P further Ihe comprehensive plan of inch Merchant Marine Department (or the development .if the flihini; industry in the Caribbean, a ship % .penally designed for the purpose Is being built in France, and is expected to arrive on the scene of operations some time next summer Thl. was revealed today b. % Commandant O. Blanche. Ad'mimATTACK SOVIET TREATY PROPOSAL CanadaBV, I ''oh trader" Bring* Tradelncrease Expected Answers To Women's Eilitor Asks Mr-men, Principal. Inscripti, Maritime. Martinique, in mi interview ..t Kent Hou-c. where he t* attending the Fishcnt-s Cmifctcnce spoiwoit-d by the Caribbean CotnmiMkMi. M the delegate of the three French department* in the Caribbean. The -fitp. which is as metres in length and motoi -driven, will carry the moat Modern equipment % it Is a large tea wheie both for i-timmrrKiil llshing .md rt *, ncin * ,0 be the feature enterxploraUon, iracludW a talnment. have: (aj Plenty of room tactlon device known as and good m "*lc (b) A aervant to Asdic. This device. empli>yint* the ar "w>unce and a hostess to receive Supersonic principle, emits sound h > uesls. ' I 8 1 with y u? m M fish location and methods of llsh "** % % nsk don 1 -"' wa,k uvcl capture, was completed last yaar and sit down, and brought notable results. Perhaps the most important disfORONTO. ONSIONMENTS of 11. shad wheat, sardines a pickled meat arrived from 81. Juhn and Halifax yesterday by the S-guenay Terminal' *>tca-\>.hii. I. -' % :.-!.Trade between the British W. . '''* sraaW. Indies and Canada is expected to Another Saguansy steamship. increase considerably during 1952, the t o m roal ia axpected to arrive cordin.. io a Canadian Oovarnfrom the Continent and UK tonient trade expert in Toronto. day with approximately 1.700 tonMr. Dannn Harvay, director of ,,f sulphate of ammonia and other the OsaMdtan Trade "Department's general cargo. (ommod i,. nvinon and one of The rlyta*aa>c will be leaving .rs of me Bittish West p., today for Trinidad uhii.Ihe Indies Tr..d. laon-alisatton plan. Saiuell will be spending fajrte  hat one of the chief f,-w jys here fUsrharguig bafon-! this quickening of trad* ahe sails on to Trinidad Both he larger dollar reserves ships are consigned to Messrs Plantations Ltd. M "token" trade scheme. claimed raaaat! % would &% held by I Undai ii he said a.-hieven trt' flnr i during surplu colonie* tiei.er.itin* arge dollar surplus for ne for about 10 years 194950. In 195051 'a* again exceeded and constilu'.i^ the greatest ever. Tin.. airpbih was Mwummulaled from th dollars which were no? s,>ont from Use under the token scheme. They wtll probably L-dutUibuted to exporters hi the form of a bonus as soon as the normal quotas had been fulfilled SMV.I Kg MO TO couyaAi Ktfrarc Another ( surplus was Canada buy geeaser quantities of sua>u from thiBritish West Indie* rather than Cuba and th< Dominican Republic CHILE TO BUY CUBAN SUGAR Chile will Cuban sugar SANTIAGO buy B0.000 tons of year under a iwowell-c busiiviiaaiii.ii 1 (ii :.i mi J\II (.in; ciiai . linn, mm iiuiik oil to eonrj * avMtnea in the form 5"f. " 'mulo,.r would never  ,,, ,, hlm ot nrnterlinn. n a*->..iled al a conference in Washington between Secretary t f State Dean Arheson (right) and representative, of the West German gu .anu.i e .:. At kft is Western Germany's Secretary of SUta Waller HaUatein. who declared the.Moscow plan was "absolutely incomplete and without any meaning." In center Is Dr. Hnna Krekelar. Cherge d'affaires fn\\> Germany, tInternational> AlsatianGuardian Or Killer? (By ROBERT GLENTON) AT night time in the public parka, in lonely street., in year commercial jsieemeiit which the shadows of buildings, the bright eye watch h l '""T,i'.",' *" bMW ~ n They are the Alsatian dons with the pricked ears and Jtr the switching tails trained by the police and the services to trap wrongdoers. What is the truth about Ihe Alsatian? Is It just another Caen and Aiiituu. and who -" % % h.i: or should it ke described as a wild animala "killer"' llvl " loa *> " h "'"f "r.." 1 1 "" -II. o.ly U, be handled by ex,t. and amvl men? -j* gfiEt£Z a "-Y / For at thia. moment there are several Alsatiaru. conmade for more and mow <>f tfiaat demned to deatli by magistrates courts for savaging adults, dogs u anted for t children, other dogs, and sheep Boy bitten Rector prayesl Police Alsatian Rajah chased a burglar a few days ago, caught Years later, a SulTollr. rector and hung on to him until prayed m his church for his blind % Fran* Faee 1 It u not likely that In the immediate future any further imancial assistance of a substantial n.tture will le made Much of thai % Iraagy given arose out Of but we suggest thai If any money* li.vome available in the future. enquiry should be maJe as to of this increaaed tM-ther lasrta are not legitimate decision t n.nuii upon them within the pire rather than outside it -Bl'.P. dmkK0* ^ M CO! (XJNE J/4///;*: / .ROMCOLOCN' > V II> i ui-^pa mil I "ni i\ I a lac I ".\rwnst turn MiOf.niAtiei. ihe Genuine "4711 Eai. u> Co* Khinc. it is now again ..t.lwma^lr iccordlng i" ihe fanVous IM -< % rat HI from Colopie on i the original , made by poltce % vife's Alsatian Bruce, which had r -.. 11-yearheen rondemned by a magistrate's Cari...*..:, amten along the Lee*P eul ,, ll l employees in his office. 0 \$ North London schoolboy wid ord r    " faithful and I Windanl IsUnds are To u "ie titles Mr. Mrs. oir Miss l(Ward ed £50 In damagea after an frt*-nd.I,.. . .... (ur un ,.-.. (' % % rir l,; more bll lln a i a-llhe and nlaataan dog ha coronei deJ u ploratl...is last year were carried certainly adds dignity to thei^. nouncad Alsatians as on with the President Theodore ' mc No on e Tissier' 1 a ship Iielonrlng to the  _, . 'UHg " % air ra "OOM SclentlAqua at Technique e T,,e P Ial f "; al **s *** i*h| * wiU ror p des Peches Mftrltitne* and fullv fcttlc U PBeginning at the rig*" rescue-dogs. eouiinj.-.! bn oejaBBaraimlc and s u f ,ho plat and n-xl to u "* 1 011 Ukc 3,nrni wh rescued ni.'rll~. roUik. ptote. place the meat knUa flrat. H'i buried p>ul*, who once ran loyally, and bravery forces and the Services. While in lha Northern T>i tory ot Australia, it is illegal keep an Alsatian as a pet because the "killer" streak is said to be so near ihe surface, in this counTf.'g-*.* "* *tf" . "T lev ordinary householders sent faithful and lov.ng ^ g , iall ,,, rcc( nllv to the cost of an owner whadult dare near them Each day more and hose does an Id the blind. Mm ihere have been cases wh ..I den" i Spen% gtfC.sanT.aia llabiea hurt No itog has won Uic Di.-kui Medal, "the animals' V C nflfl often. No dog is so frequently I being trained lo leangi But lor every such "tory are just as many of dogs who have hat I. it tic. down ppened to Mr. Ceorgr a 67-year-old bus drlvei hat street B fortnight ag< Attack by two fontet-s person these guardian animals have sudbrutally. hysterically, ^ savaged denly turned round and bitten a *" ,b '*" f" d tas brushed against In addition to UM boat. Di Morice his been commissioned to establish a permanent fisheries experimental laboratory In the French West Indies. Oth.-i Itaps eontemplateii in the long range plan for fisheries dcAclopmenl include a fishing SChOi bonus system for the constnictn>n | for fishermen, and a of fishina traft Caracas Takes Away E Whes. She is ^consigned to oortant, can be nuuJe: otherwise. Messrs Harriman & Co.. Ltd. an intemiptlon I i rude He was attacked by twa Alsaiians. A.i he fought to protect his throat and face, the dogs bit his leu* and tore his trousers. A police-sergeant had to use his truncheon to fight them off and i'iotect himself. Now. according to figures issued i the Kennel Club, the Alsatian i: second in popularity as a pat in this country. The experts deny the populnr is not rumour that the dog has a wild wolf streak In It "Every dog." they say, "has n trace of wolf blood,* Tha R.S.P.C.A. sav the Alsatian is ]uat like any other canine it Is all a matter of individual i mperament. There are people lighting herd to preserve the good name of the l reed. There are just as many ho have b*cn badly bitten, % atlv to go Into the police court imess box and try tn get Allans destroyed. Recently an Alsatian, alone in i iijse. rolled on a burning rug to > ut out the Hamas. It died a fevs ours later. Bui some years ago In Simla thi. Alsatians of the Rajah of Athgarh .Hacked and ate his cousin who went for a walk unaware that the oogs wore loose. them. They aervad Tin i e are Alsatians in this country today who served in the desert in wartime, who were at parent.-, alike. Legislation to ban them ha* bean suggested several turn bal on euch occasion it has been m iratod Why Because no one really knows the truth about Ihe AlsuIU.n-l.lJ BLOOD IMPURITIES Many ailments arc cauaed by pour blood which may altevt dw wnole tyHnn Skin eruption. and irniauoo, aunplc ih*run)autai and paionil *> loints are nature's Ugnal thai you need Cladce'a as* Hlood Mixture. Tan fsanous rocdnux hatpt 10 cleanse the Nood rtream of impiirtties and keep you hi and tree tton these sod aimilar troebfcaoine coeapeanci Be asr# to eak for CLARKE'S-^ Bloo dMix ture \^'^yy.-'^^^^^^^^^^.^'^^^^^^.' f ^^fi^^g^^'^.'.'^^^.t ^^y t ^^ MWDEltN FARM EQUIPMENT Maw . TRACK, HALF-TRACK and WHEEL TRACTORS PLOUGHS CANE CARTS ; BAOASSF. SPREADERS (ideal also for applying Filler-press Mud, Aahcs and ...nure) m FERT1I.1ZF.R DISTRIBUTORS MANURE LOADERS GRASS MOWERS (Trailer St P.T.O. Types) CRASS RAKES CRASS LOADERS SIDE DELIVERY RAKESlor windrowlng Cane Trash and a host of other useful attachro enU \GRICULTURAI. IMPLEMENTS KF.Ql'IKK ON TMK-SPOT PRIOR |TY SK.RVKIM. \M> OUR... SPECIAL MOBILE SQUAD I'NOKR THE PERSONAL SUPERVISION Of MR. a D. CLARKE IS PART OF THE AFTER-SALES SERVICE WHICH IS ESSENTIAL. Your Enquiries are Cardially Invite* I COURTESY GARAGE ROBERT TIIOM LIMITED Trial li.n. While Park Road H.E RRI N GS FRESH o/-in TOMATO SAUCE HA HHA IPOS 4 01H IOTTO\ i w i ttis i LTD, VWA II I I1

PAGE 1

PACK rouA ll\l!lt\IM)S MIVIII VII WEDNESDAY. APRIL !>. li:' fflKBADOS Amowii WMtawhy. April IS. US2 COTTON sn >.! THE ma*<>r result of bulk-bu>.ng by the United Kingdom of certain agricultural produce of tfie British Caribbean has been the imp: ,.-d status of agricultural workers within the nnii. This point was well made in the Report of the Surar Industry Commission (Jamaica 1945). "As the price of sugar can be increased by the Ministry of Food irrespective of market conditions, the emphasis has shifted away from the wages which the industry can afford to pay to the wages required to provide for the need* of the workers." This new policy of considering the needs of the sugar worker has been followed eonMsteiuly by the British Labour Government in the postwar years and has been further developed by the present Conservative Government. The Conservative Government of the United Kingdom has not only increased the price per ton paid to the sugar producer by a substantial sum but has rtiven a long term guarantee of purchase over an 8-year period. Any criticism of United Kingdom policy with rrr-nrrl to tbt Untish Caribbean today must take into account the truly handsome treatment that the British Conservative Government has meted out to the Colonial (and Dominion) sugar producers. The British Caribbean territories have not been slow to acknowledge the generosity of such treatment and their satisfaction has been expressed on several occasions. In view of the harmonious relations which m>w exist between the sugar producinr territories of the British Caribbean and the United Kingdom as a result of a realistic sugar policy it is surprising to find the government of the United Kingdom pursuing a far different policy with regard to another important West Indian product cotton. Si I Mand Cotton was introduced into | the British West Indies at the beginning of this century when the competition from bounty fed European sugar was ruining the West Indian sugar growers. At that pi-riod representatives of the United Kingdom Guveiimuni visited the British West ftid.es and advised local government firstly to improve their cultivation of cane with a view to bringing down costs of production, and secondly to diversify their agriculture. Profiting by the early experiments conducted by the Imperial Department of ARricuUui.m-St. U*oa atfd^Montterrat, a numhef at fcirfcadidn planters planfcd IBacres Of eotS in 1902. By 1907-08 the acreage under cotton had increased to 7,194 and a yield of 988,443 lbs. of lint and 2 431 778 lbs. of seed were obtained. A tew years earlier the Barbados Cooperative Cotton Factory began to express edible oil from the cotton seeds and this minor industry continued today although cotton seed was replaced by copra as the main ingredient during the war. The fortune of cotton in Barbados after its early spectacular rise to P. rom !" n ~ £ an alternative to sugar cane has gradually waned and the island's present output ot lint is only 6 l 2 tona. tUtUS But cotton has persisted in the British West Indies and is grown to-day m ht. Vincent, Monlscrral. St. KitU.-Nevis, Barbados and Antigua. The majority of West Indian cotton is grown in Antigua where more than 2,000 bales were produced m 1951 at a value to the island of more than $1,000,000 (B.WO-). This year Antigua WHS planning an expansion of output and hoping for a return of $2,000,000. These hopes have been xterminated by an announcement from the Raw Cotton Commission which buys all the cotton imported into the United Kingdom to the effect that it cannot buy any more cotton from Antigua. This decision did not surprise anyone engaged in the marketing of cotton because the Raw Cotton Commission had for years been making forward purchases of cotton. But the cotton growers of the West Indies and manufacturers in the United Kingdom had been hoping that the purchase tax imposed on textiles would have been removed by Mr Butler, the present Chancellor of the Exchequer in the United Kingdom, when the sales of sea island cotton products would automatically have risen in the United Kingdom, thereby n\ui' .:".ig *' was made to tread was the path ut BcottaSB sobriety and strictness. Two worldly fieurcs The second set of answers are not necessarily different in b-isi< content; only, perhaps, in undertones and overtones. They arUo because the Queen is married, and she naturally turns first for informal discussion to her husband, lands and elsevhcro for Philip's anxious to establish hmself as a Philip, though bom a princeholidays and inspired in him a public llgurc linn. Mined the Navy and saw the naval ambition. How"* His uncle stepped in. world He Is. aaaln, the nephew Now nobody is going to sugHe was president of the National almost the wardof Luis and gost that the earl will us* a Playing Fields Association. Ha Edwin.i Mountbatten, two striasledgehnmn.er influence "n hla arranged a banquet at the Maningly worldly figures. hrphew. As has been said, Philip slon House to announce his resigLet us first sec what powers Is not a subject for the heavy nation m (avow of I'hiHp. Philip possesses. father" approach; and the earl Urn handed over to Philip the The answer is short; he has would not lend himself to it. public t*k of launching the assonona. JJe has the rank of a Britrsh But he is thow He is there for clatlon's £500.000 Silver Jubilee prince ,td the i.tles Duke of pi dip to consult in any kind of Appeal-sand then vanished from Edinburgh Xsrl of Merioneth, uimigjami litrjUSM therefore the picture. Imd Baron Oroerrwlch. all conbe considered. The Job gave Philip his first ferred on him by the late King. Awareness *'ide contacts, his first practice as But as the husband of tho j^^ and Edwina Mountbatten public speaker, his first goodQueen he w still her subject, and Wl rc I(H lollg lhe ^[ourful leadworks Press he will have no further title or m ot a cosmopolitan society On the accession the problem special privileges that she herself wh ieh was lightly held together of Philips pjbhc work rose does not confer. b> its taste for the chic a n d the f8hi And a(*l" V !" 1 lc *! p He is not yet Prince Consort cnu kka. stepped in It Is said that he adThi> title was givoft to Albert by Lo u U Mountbatten was t h e vised Philip to become the eyes Victoria an Letters patent, but play-friend of the now Duke of and ears" of the Queen. 17 years after the marriage. Windsor, a second cousin by , ... Even as Prince Consort Philip s blrIh in deed. "' v""* precedence would have to be Edwina Ashley was the grand_v_ o*.u._ t... ..,...^I *h Seeded For AW died before d ughter of : lr Ernest, fassel. ^ J^JS fo^SU., PHILIP LISTENS ... a polo field % mill with the Mountbatten* rid* and elseveiore for Philip's him a i settled. the Jewish-born financier who Albert, of course, was nothing was Edward like a s popular as Philip when p, JVi him ,(,ark-Ta.ie~ h y h ^ZJ%.1'S! ZS'JS*'** .mall part In her (onnal bu.i,,,,, hi ,,e,atlonal >et. And '"J!SS\S^;!i!Ji > 'SjM. .^ neu She wrote about w State ,,,,, Br K)k H  u c p, y ulk WM Philip run .id icd the llto nd paper, "Albert helped m. with b no mon , e ^ nnrd lo lnc to'et. of Pr nee Albert and the blolt.ng-p.pr, when I gned." ,,,,,, deljed deeplnto the aeeret royal liter the Queen broadened h,Thm wrtr hroadJ , .hought :' r '^ v ""'. s h c lcr .."^f reaponsibllltie. until he WU v,rwhich ,olloed out etr-n.t JJ*  overstep the line In contually her .eereUry and most idea. There waa Intellectual in""n":""J! **Z ,7*. ,,.,,.,! Intimate SdrMr. But alter his .,, | uixmr and the la-rt, But r h en the unexpected a private HcrWr/ < % % the Jnd Mus  Un i aluS u, kl d ol happen.. In ernergeney ot c rUUi. death 9e is a private ecrelarr. nre undecided They will, however, be exactly what the Queen enooses. Strom,' mind With all that In mind it remains true that Philip ea n play a part not In Influencing a particularly M-lf-.i % iin-H young ijucvri but n. So to speak, bi-eakfflst-table dis(IISMMtl-., So let It I* said at one l;c is a young man of cha Ha has not the brill i. I.i.'li ujtl. r 1U nurd. Just awareness. When the world moved to I a . 4 laouis Mountbatten stepped inU. i^^ZT*.. M- MOW. He played his par! We ha,. then in IhU sertos of In successive posthoni of para"* ^invryed the range of mount rasponilDtU^ and of hla SP un L cl, e and faint whleh iy will judge, fhe Queen can turn when she ii, adii played bar part, too. wishes. with the brains of a man and The Queen, however, is selftha attrUmtea of *, ,i P peataasad i n turn of lint. trite DttlBd She ceads avidlynewsi they arc now. much papers, books, and official reports. tbsir nephew's mamaShe "ill no* l put off with that age to the steps of tho throne. generalities. L *er, It was E-irl Muunibatteti wlm A1J>S she Insists on the details ..f inn 1 ma* have conceived the Idea thai tha notives. bJeh % OBMlhav* ..tlnbuted to Philip would be a highly desirIndeed. Mr. Churchill has been him i .,; h. h.is ,i ueiiKth at % % coi f '-< EUsabam urprisad si nar grip iflabs, mind which could make for an When the difficulty arose. Just u>th domestic and foreign, admirable firmness of purpose. s ' had with AlUrt. that Philip \: m.v well be that, sooner th. H. h not lightly swayed. ' BfUtsn, the earl made anybody thinks, she will emerge Id has a sUj'-iig sense of family the initial arrangements for his M a completely Independent and and he reveres one elder memnaturalisation. . ,dcntin..Ule entity, a Queen of this ber In particular This is his But on the impending marriage Healm to whom the advisers will Uncle Dickie, the 51-year-old *>rl he would not be drawn. Neither bf ^-.j to gp for advice. Motintbatten. did he take any further steps n TWj cri  . prepared and Tho earl watched over Philip's MJ mailer Developments would urilUn youth, sent him to Gordonaloun. >;'k* their own path. 0 y the Scottish public school, proHis tank JOHN MATHER vlded the background at BroadAfter the wedding, Philip was L.E.S. This Will Shake Them In Texas 1^ R. M. M-cCOLL WASHINGTON. 7 NEVER thought I should see the day ; but here it is and I can hardly* stop lauRi.ing. A courageous chap named Stanley Walker (a retired newspaperman who once wrote an uproarious book called "Mrs. Aster's Horse") has teed off and written an article for a big circulation magazine taking Texas and Texansall their legends and boastingcarefully apart. He starts off: "Texas has an inferiority complexthat's what's wrong with it" and I takes it from there. | The complex cracks Walker is because "The Texan knows that his revolver was invented (by Colonel Samuel Colt, of Connecticut, his barbed wire by Joseph Glidden of Illinois. his reaper by Cyrus McCormick. of Virginia, and his plough by the great John Deere, of Vermont "The Texan never invented a damned thing." Tra la, la. rjEPARTMENT of Get-together between TV and filmsM.G.M. is planning to make trailer lilms, to play for just one minute on TVadvertising the company's fullscale producis. lOHN CROSBY, TV and radio critic for the New York Herald-Tribune, says that although immense money and effort are being poured into new techniques of making lilms for TV "they got worse and worse all the time." PUBLICATION of William Hillman's book "Mr. President," with many hitherto private Truman files thrown open to the public gaze, is rather like pitching petrol into a furnace. The chorus of denunciation, rebuttal, allegation and rejoinder, loud enough already in Washington, rises to a frenzy and I shall have to start wearing ear-muffs if I am to get anf work done. Senator Homer Capehart, a Republican,' accuses the President of saying just after the war that he feared England and France more than Russia. According to Capehart, Senator Wheeler told Truman at the time: "You are too optimistic about Russia." And Capehart told the Senate ; "The President knew nothing about Russia because he never studied that country." f-\\TFlSII TURNER. Black Sammy Davis, Peter Rabbit Smith, Bucklejaws Johnsonthese are the names of some of Wash-j ngton's more notorious dope pedlars, so a Congress committee was told by the chief of Washington's anti-drugs squad. And the witness, Police Lieutenant Hiaimar Carper, described the appearance of a typical dope "pusher" this way : "He has long side whiskers, wears a big bow-tie, a long overcoat, and suede shoes." The I l(Hiic s In The Commons LONDON. play a useful part In the welfare GraveaemU: "Will * Rt hon In the licule ot Common* (on of the Increasing numbers of coloGentleman bear in mind there is Marrli 3> Mr James Callaghan nial tdudcnl* in this country, but also a need for Increasing the (Labour. Cardiff l a.*kcd the Sec1 shall try to ensure that they are number of places available to etar*>f Stata for Foreign Affairs run with all reasonable economy." colonial MudenU ,: whv British passports issued to Sir Edward Keeling: "Is the some kind, which are preferable colonial seamen resident In this Secretary of State aware that the to Hie type of lodgings which Is country, are valid for a period of AfUTel In my Question arequotoften .provided six months only. In a written reply, M (Under-Secrelarjf of State) "Seamen do not require passports to enable lhm to pursue then occupation or to return to thnr home country. Seamen's identity documents aralssued for this purpose by the Ministry of Transport or. In the case.of colonial seamen, by the colonial authorities concerned. "When, as sometimes happen*.-ft has to travel overland to cd from the report of the Comp* Mr Lyttclton: "The hon. Nutting troller and Auditor-General to Member is asking me another "ila House?" Question, but in any case I have Sir Hichard Acland (Labour, no Intention Of closing any more." Ol H HI:AIM:IIS SAY t-'umiLy Planning The Edlto consequently % denied the common atmosphere tonducive to human The Adeocaic decency ami dignity. It must necessarily follow that these children SIR,-Much has been said must becomr vicious, physical and Join his ship, a passport is issued against tamilj planning and birth moral degenerate!, and in due for that specific purpose. an Us control, but different men often course begin to perpetuate th' period cl validityis restricted to ^ hf ume UU icct Irill  .im,.,. very conditions we would like to ensure that once tins purpose has CIIt angles. Therefore. 1 hope that eradicate, beonatrved, tha |M i iM-v.di % >-^ leas as a travel document uiu thf tine restriction i< lemoTCd by the proper authority The subject of birth control is Sir Edward Keeling (Consen,deed a controversial one. l.ut on li..-. Twickenham!, asked_ tho atc lU nt of its uiiDortance to th A TERRIFIC BM in babies is going on ^ also a boom in "motels," the serveyourself inns for motorists. Thoroughly alarmed by the fact that this double trend is leaving the old-fashioned hotel higher and dryer, hotel men are trying to stage a come-back. And so a concern running 22 hotels on the Pacitic north-west coast offers to house chil-j dren free if they are under 14 and have a parent with them. The hotel men think the child will remem-' ber the place where he had such a good time i and will return when he grows up V|Y BREAKFASTa large orange juice.' two boiled eggs and a pot of coffee usually costs me 65 cents (4s. 8d.(. To-day, I however, I drifted into the Mayflower Hotel. ; where, in the gracious "coffee shoppe,' the' same meal totted up to $1.31 (9s. 4d.). Trying to account for this added cost, the only reason I could spot was a red velvet rope at the entrance. Travelling salesmen queued behind the rope waiting their turn to go in. I qpilK HUMAN TOUCH: RUa Hay worth, back at work on the set. has a notice upj on her dressing-room door : "No admission and no exceptions." I -lull be allowed to express i opinion very < pposite others. N.tture had not dealt manv with her l,i ,ite children, for with them in the habitat in which the are i rthlng is provided, food, water, clothing and shelter. \iu: with us nature has Secretary of State for tho Coloweffare of Birbad".""wTth which ^"hu^T^ T 1 ". ,act f hil *t mes whether he iavvatt of the am a^p^ coll cerned. I consider ;";' h '**'* P 7'> f *' lo.of 1:70.115 during 1*40-51 lf H iSng instead of a curse, if P***** naedg and for those wh. on the 11 residences for overlhnso wno hllv ,. cye , 0 we and ?£ ?*S^' li JKL SMS students administered by the -. r , nP r V)I ,,IH G through the '"' *' P*JP J 1 truB fc BrlUsh Council ( the Colonial Tgl VIUHM Tn^t^andloStt5 "'V w f "^ to "" ^e 'itmdard OflW. iinltldrng a lew, of £27.483 ffi" 3? ^ *hlSlned 'h? tne J /S ^S % 1^^in six months on the residence in S1  M llf MVOrtv iml soualor wlO, IZS^lSSS^&^t^a a1 *" our capacin to aupport it support depends upon sight of poveiK Han i, P!^**! 1 ---yift 0 1 "* '-heir attendant eonditic amortisation of C78.59B spent on ,.. delinquency and c: idapUng the building: ami if he Stapl will close these rfBMei SCOTLAND'S BEST iS SCOTTISH CREAM in i \in it si on II ii aisht A Favourite at all The Leading Clubs. Ask for SCOTTISH CREAM. WHISKY at Your Grocer. 'SSSS,','*'.Vrt'S.','.VS&*,'SSSSSSSSS*'SSr'SS*'SSSSSSSSSSH I think th., thcy would chano nd "" ,ry Su r M>. Lyttetton: Hiiring 1950their views, and agree that the We are told that emigration will 51 tho British Cotim-il admi come for some action to nolve this problem, but how can lered seven (not'11) residences be taken In this very pressing anything els* but permanent for col-mial students on behalf of matter to attempt to find a soluemigration solve it? Surclv we the Colonial Office and the kal tion of this problem and that u to know how attempts hive failed on theso reeidenceti was £56,731. arrest the alarmlnii rate of Inmlieniblv. for the emigrant more The net opcrotins loss of £27.485 crease in u ur !H WEET A BIX < SHREDDED WHEAT S ALL BRAN fc QUAKER OATS C DANISH BACON S EMPIRE COFFEE i hone Goddard's

PAGE 1

KEONESDAV. APRIL 16. 1S2 HVRBADOS ADVOCATE PAGE FTVt 22 Called In Carpenter's Murder Re-trial RIDGWAY VISITS CANADIAN FRONT THE prosecution called on 22 witnesses at the Court ofGrand Sessions yesterdav in order to substantiate their case against 29-yeer-old Cyril Lash ley a carpenter of Government Hill, St. Michael who is charged with the murder of his reputed wife Elmina Hoyte on January 11. 1952. His Lordship the Chief Justice Sir Allan Collymore is pres.dini,. This ii a retrial as on the first lone, Skeete said that the knife trial an Assize Jury failed to He saw the accused willi was a agree whether or not Cyril Lashshoe maker's knife. The handle ley was guilty of the murder of f the knife was black. v. his reputed wife Elmina Hoyte. first saw the accused with the Defence counsel in the caae Is Mr. knife, he had it in his hip pocket. Denis Malone and Mr. P. F. Field, ,,IS friendship with the accused Assistant to the Attorney General ">ded on November 28. IBM. Or is appearing for the Crown. ,n n.ht of January 11 he me! Of the Jurors called to sit yesUie d ed and in the course of terdaj  the first day of the retrial \ conversation the deceased said five were ordered to stand bv" sn f, w f* no1 af raid , r the accused by the prosecuting counsel while ,."* llv "J n M ^ l ? "* "'" % "' two were challenged by Mr. ne n ccul t d "* ^l 1 "* "* \f.inn.  'o live as husband and wife in a . house at Government Hill. TWumii today will call on Dr. The deceased brought a case of i evidence about threats against the accused and on the clothing after the case he used to see them of the accused and the prosecution " the road together will close Its case. To Mr. Field Skeete said that -.,,,., ,. .. he told the deceased that he saw Outlining the case to the Jury he accu)ed wlth n knif> Mr|lcr SPSS .JS^Sfd Mr H F H"S ,he d nd he warSai thT C toia tnem that the deceased died ceased as a result of the multiple wounds Indicted on her by the Charles Pilgrim of Eckstein accused at about 8 p.m. on JanVillage. St. Michael a bailift Mid uary II. The evidence which the that he has known the accused Crown will put before them Is for about eight years. He got to divided into four categories. It know Hoyte through a Miss Tull. appeared that the deceased had He served a notice In November lost her husband sometime in on the accused telling him to quit 1M9 and after that she lived with a board and shingle house. As Hill. St. Michael .said that the io|i Constable Sorin* the accused as his reputed wife he gave the accused the notice DOOM of the deceased was quite asserted the accused m her house at Government Hill, the accused said that he was not close to hers. On January 11 she .,'. ., "T7 __ about leaving the house cailly for he was standing In the gap and saw c ..-*?* J 7 .. K, nn tS? had put much labour into it. He die accused with a woman come 2Kr ,,T aUa,hod lo told the accused to leave the from the house of the deceased , When hearing the prosecution Walcott to give nil (he stains he l Lord Munster Pays Visit Seatvell ... .'v iiaa> klOHDAT % From Page 1 M*  SL. rrtek n. OoMi: over the (jt week-end |or  brief  tu. J \-ni NUW r a-aa**> stay, has already M T'AI^^IT'AL*^ Bahamas and Jamaica. 'wSS*£ He said that the object of his Ar;* !" % A it**rd-Joa. A Ahduii> visit Is t,, familiarly himself with L_, % *. ***£. V % '! % 1 enme of the territories in th.,,.,  M^,,,,, N MCK****. J rtMMBOl, MarkaftlM. M Miu. M Hm R Hni Although only in the island for *; "; % % -^.u,,. D Water, a few dawi haTwaa -* i,,,-^,-,. % % Maru\ O M>jtini A DM' a rew aays, h was very .Repressed K DA br-u. a M-TV by what he had -een and r... A Ua Ufnt that there was a friendly i-h seemed to prevail "' has already met Mr. Q, H. ir.n AMIII.I \ Adams. Leader of the House of J"arpn K-iahau n-RXanaii. % "!** I) and Mr. F. i V2S?*st ^'V*"j 0 h""'"j'.sl'i' Leader of the Opposlti. i JSf ^' non io member* of the Lc, is! tlive  %  % efraro aito Council. %  %  Bans*.... vimnu auriMMk Askr-t what u.-a (hn .r,., f rranaa AimMiMi. Dorean foMar iw.il Oftlec WlUl regard to Amirr B-*in. Situ JuliMU Mart*" ,,.. rM A*TU>iqiiK, (of Hart % ^TL[R T' ft f"* *i?£Z''£ ".hat they would first have to find M !" ^.. Himh.-t a-i^ Seeks. ii*.,r. Every $wet is more delicious with BIRD'S CUSTARD VStl\ U4 IT I W I A RIDINO IN A CANADIAN SCOUT At. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgwsy (center) Bupreme Commander in the Far East, makes a tour of the Canadian sector of the Korean front. Beslda him Is BHg. Gen. Rocklaxfaam. ol the Canadian Brigada and. at left. Gen. James A. Van FletL That house is situated some feet from the road. "They lived in this condition nousc  ti i eillTtT C .-.v housc without any nose. until September when they had accused said .. Je sus Christ 1 some trouble. It was alleged -.,, n ki ii .. mil(v | v i .,|l that the accused has assisted her f ctmv labour S'^e'then l Ihe'uved'and^at^had nrllr? to ,n hou>e of ln d SS mmA m she nved and that she had promuad hcr jomcthing. The aecused accused told her that while hwas the am whaUaat the P**P** haw wanted a dee|) water harbour. It K % that thry should have it by all means. > to another query with regard to the oil rights leasing Mtuation In Barbados, he said that .he matter was at present occupying the attention % >r the Ho\ise of Lu-ds and was being discussed. Asked why Serelse Kli % i stu ffared a post In Jamai. Assistant Secretary instead of i Government being allowed lo return to his own some boys Territory he said that it had nothbody of a mg U> do with the CotoaJ kl isu^ it. kr. M Thvwn. I-.II 8 stmiu.., CinwWI Mr>. then ary 11 about 8 p.m. Ml nthout any noise. The and go down Government Hill. "" ~ JL am Later the deceased spoke to her SoomM ovc? that the acciued has aitd'her BS^SSmaS^ immS ^'SE^StllSgS'A* !" Won !" He made lnquirl ,nd ""wa, purely a Dommion aff.lr\ % '^ A % ^ % " " 4h "-' * n £?LVL, W !" l AMer^deSa^leASS^K: \ ,tXvt h, 'l. ,he ,NU,ed Cyril Lol Munster leave. Barbados JSS .%E?S??.. te J t h er thc La.hley There were blood on ^ ld y fo,British Guiana to stains on the coat of the accused cont.nue his tour of the islands in *, w h . h ..p Pr o KhKl a a.: ~ Ka-- >%--£ &: St.9UTiSfi'%IT* "" c r """-" COM4 lh._r.tUKd lo jive him To Mr. M.lono Piljrim uld lin !h ." u.Jd % b. speaking couiJn'l nd It ny lon.r. MW tho Afli-r. the accused waa cauUOTWd. anything. During the month ol lhat the notice was signed by the deceased annrnmrhln. November the deceased went to deceased who also paid him thc tS^g'imnSl Wh-% *"" lu, '? ln ,h ". "U^ ovsr the Assistant Court of Appeal as money to serve the "notice, the accused_ had put her in (or He has been convicted hi y S!^ X T?2!J? h "V"j.'' lh h " % .>' :i looking lot lb few *he was a neighbour of the acknife and th.s vaa later f.und money ho alleged "that she owed limes but "h'.'wai never "convicted j^cd moved'"IiTa"?' fn!m 'ihV. \",''"' "" w "" ** 0ov % ;r^  m,; hii n vou Th :ii7^ fl frrrh n ew:t. &£**"  en,on l tho gggstJ B ** £* a £ 37^-11 ^ nesses that immediately after On ont r!" ,,*, ,h A~ B ,~A knifp l R r W,,U " for vx m M. they had come out of the Court Augustus Philips, a labourer. ^^,0^ "^J^.^Tl^. **>* % f*t Mda was waT HranfkiT Asks Ahoul li.MilIn St Lu*\ % il V \IV cin.ld Clarke. Col. Raman Mr. Ol,,., Mix Willie SVaW. 11 dui Orsnun. Mr. vw.k.. Mr l,n Nkbiwk Mr Chan.. as Ibadihj*. Mr N# n-n Wll. far (11 AOII.OI er Mr n-a'Kon ColmMtugc li M4ftTtM.ll 1 Mr Orors* Rorkhahf. Mr Siphn 'lnnnn>. Mr* June Mactar>i*y 1,IISI..M, MM lairtc lliunl Mr. May Manhal! *ra Oladyi Anora\. Mr ftaivad-f Mm rr.Ti Airofave. Ml llrrtirrt mil Mr Drral tWalhii Mil nor-thy Roach. Mr MKRarl a*uMl Graham Haa>. Mr I'raaarlf ClaimvonlfMr Tortvnra KUhartli. Mr Hrn;d % ttwart, MM Edna Slroail Mr Va.Morjca-vti Mr Oiivn II uR Ml To mak sure of Uncyvwlled flavour. crcaminess, wnooihneKS be ccruin your cusuud is Bud'*, lor ai long ss vou 0< jour mother ... can mnember the namr Bird'* has been an assurance of unvarying So SHMR yoa ask for Custartl, It's srtsa iu atk fi- Bira's Dnral TTHMIUH. D Warr-n J ( Mr. Nan JmvN Mr Anhil-.1 Hi Mr Alraandat Ttkompaon. Mra 1> rtiunv,.*.... Mr. Kanitatn HaKnea. ASina Uillt'lh. Mr Juaa BIIIIMC" Dir.UtTt'RIS  OM atjimAt of 'Appeal certain threats were told The Court that he knew the ^"cd^sMcv and"^"aaw"tKl hn^'" 1 !" W,Uch app, a,x d to ** lerday questlone.1 'the talk made by the accused to the deJ lBI MI ll Dafe ra ibt mmjWfM. shV^adnUred^ the piuS ^??' J. E T. Branrkn. il.) % % : si 1... I ess % -.1 ceased "at the bottom of the On January 10 he saw the accusCourt steps. After that disagreeed about 7 p.m. on Welches Road. merit the deceased refused to live He was coming out with the accused and she went Shop. H e told the accused to and staved at her mother's house leave the deceased alone The at the Ivy, St. Michael. Other cused then said. "Be Jesus Christ. witnesses will tell you that other actions and threats were, made by the accused to thc deceased." "On the day January It It appears that the deceased left her home for a walk about 7 p.m. and she went as far as TweedI am going to kill her I intend .. A. S Cato said that on Janwe,,,^nou. ,,^ m ^V'7 d '^li?! "'the uary 12 he performed a post QfaDryGoods J,.** i J .. S.. ',' n Jan mnrtrm on the dead body of '" u .Rt. 1 f 0 1 o 30 pm hp wa9 Elmln Ho >te In hli walking along Government Hill death was due to UM ltn other boys and heard shouts wounds received ami these Ha SffH about 50 wounds W*N inflicted wl* a the Department of Highways Tianaport to proceed in full witn i he road programme in the Colonial r:illl S " * %  % HVI 1 IMWIN ,.a ri i t BU-ail el Vn. lo kill her." He walked with the J !" ,n r'-~m n ,l, *? p ln ' r >!] >;. res of thc Department ot On January 11 the next day -'na began to stab ;it Vis) u..m.ni Arnold Dalrymplc, an island Highways and Transport no un he heard that someone was on % TOUnd constable said that Police Conemployed In SI. Lucymurdered in Government Hill. L lh if man, ran up Ihe road by stable Springer arrested the a When.. accused to Tweedside Road wh he left ttw accused. over a woman who was kniiV >n the ground. The man then got CotiMderable force was used to up and went away. He came back inflict some of the wounds. l-i M M / M.4 Mr Karaal Hunral. M.lr Rai.rl Mn AMolnriia Ihuvral. Mr* Mr William Arv.1.., Ml Uaiaa Uuininu. Mr* Clam Quinlerv. Ml UWaOo, Mr* HVMI A...,i4i, l-b-.ni. Mr . He went to Governm-nt Hill !" ,'"?*" %  ,h e aecused. arrcn the aecused. The accusixl wan and Traiuport to proceed In 2"t-H" e nv |Mfed by the Col 19523. The accused Lishley was finally was asked about r iui. oV.. F Springer. had. and he said Viat the snot near the home where 'here. "iirrcd Clarke said on January thrown it behind the wall at Eiiimii. thry hid lived as tnanaraiI wife To Mr Malone Philip, said that J" !" JH P-m. he was at uMi,nienl House. Th. knife E " m "' 1 % he accuMd attacked thc woman he has never s.w n lh,. n.rllMn [',' IK V T Ga P. with other boys, was then found by t'ollre c.i.S.V,-.1 M Hie :imn..l i> thc nd the aecused "plnylnj togeth"e"uw the accraie.1 over a woman atablo Springer The accused HKMMd Whc^ wa. ly n. on the % When he talked with the ac" l,h  >"" % The accused afterwa. then taken to District ",V murrf on her !" Tck ^used on January 10. 1952 there J:"^" got up and went In Ihd l'i>liStaiion. ground on her Mck. was ^ Qn( ^^ pre<1 nl direction of the lle.oivolr There When am*ll the aecused He left there and went to the He knew that the accused hn.t a! B moon out and he recognised said "I did It. I am satisfied." Reservoir where he spoke to the some trouble with a house. The !"" kl m n %  % > eeused Cyril Sgt rUyiui of Ih.tnrl -A" TIIK House o. Assembly watchman and then the watchaccused said that he was going to Ji,, -V. .. .,, Police Sliition told the Court thai ya icr.lav i.fu-rnoon passed M man saw him go to thc stand pipe kill the deceased and he was *' '* Moy Ihirdlc (151 of Howthe arrusod was placed "i Ihe itlon for the c mpulsory where it is alleged that he washserious about It. I .n^T *?? B ^ 1 1 Wlal " PoUr '' van on h B Instructions cquisition of 72.550 squaiit.i ..r ed his hands. Meanwhile a bus Forty-year-old porter Jumes "". ,,L 'l* [*' ut _' s P m " IKI " % " dMd .9jy of a ,, ... w,,i II,..,1 < %  tha passed that way and a policeman Herbert told thc Court that on ,,.,. "",. P"l'on nm-ernmenl woiii.m ri Lovernmenl Hill ..  v lf rl ,|ar t li il. p| rj I got off and arrested the aecused. January 11 about 4 30 pm. he met ,, "' % ".,.. A w ? m *" "*" "" n V" ". "St*. "T ""V*" .round ai thc user On his arrest, the accuu^l told ,hc accused and the £&Z said w, ,C ,w 23 E? "' """' ""' .. OUI 1 """*_" % ': the policeman that he did it. Th. tha, he was going , SB the J"^1^,'.7,"^^  Z2rVJ"^Z%£T Rt Movln, S? pas.l.ig % % > th, "" *N H'.l H....~ Mr '... j,.>., Government To Buy Land iranus att BCMBAT M TKINIUARMi. >.UI i. cw I'ltfcln. '' % iiann. Mr rr. Mr Kannt-lli llatnr*. Mi iB. Mr William QrsSW. Mi.  i; n...iu.. Mr I*-TI Mia* A.In,, tlrlffllh Mr* Nornian KlpprrI % I,,., Dr ..,..,.,. W ARE HERE ^"S-'' AGA.N TII'S is THE TOP-OF-TIIi % % s BMUSB RO THIM; AN ORDINARY Q\ DOKS IT I:TTI:R, IN LESS TIME AND MORE ECONOMICALLY HIGHLY EFFICIENT ON CAS TCRVES, GAS RINGS, OIL STOVES, Etc ONLY $9.74 EACH. HARRISONS Hardware Store Broad St. policeman then questioned the ceased whenever he could get her. ,h. road !" "" *"" w m up !" L^.* SS . .h. HJ. "esolutk*. Ur. Cummins, who took ITS SXLSS SS" XL", H. a uva .ccu-d u, be care^"g;^ Govcrnmcn, S^'yUSS,'ft search behind the wall of Govful as a man was hanged recently. '%.  ^ ,.,,^  ( when the accused said -RJnx thc charjred wilh the murdci 4 DWII then .1'"' M fl 1 have Just killed Miss Elmin.i llovte. felling the land. He h n.^ked the accused if SI Bancroft said he wrnt lo mentioned the ftfure of *.5W). I Mr (J II. Adam  iat thi wiser h-id been ""You will also hear the evito Government Hill and saw tha p 1 *. 0 dence of Dr. A. S. Cato who perflC \ us fassed WithFirst witness ailed by the cross-examined Herbert said prosecution was: J ha / he was convicted tor using Albertha Tull of the Ivy, St. indecent language. He was alM Michael said Hoyte was her rtmviM for preten.lmg to work daughter and she was 31 years obeah but never was convicted for old Hoyte's husband died in ?*"""*;, Some people Call him 1948. and nhe had Uved In Gov^ octor ^m the time he was a. ernmenl Hill with the accused '*>}' .   until Septemlwr 1951. She then W^n he spoke with the accusliveri with her. ***** w aa no .?r e prwent. up the Thr .niuserl then left him and clothing of the accused went in the direction rf the pipe. WaUot' for examination. "MoryM. Lewis" Under Repairs out fui'thci loniiiicm. "Can. tonstrut'lor" To Load Sugar WATERFRONT activities ,cTHE motor vessel I.SUU she (Tulli Sylvia" White. 122) Jf Covern'"'"I i' !" !" yMtemajr alter Canstrarlar Is expected lo U went to the Assent Cou to ntent 11,11 said "I have known the 2*?** ""' K S "'l !" J "'7 her. today to load l,IKn bag. attend hearingT in the ease In ""used lor some time and also mM !" '" n '?ay week-end rugar, 800 puncheon, ol tao&M de"he deceased. On January 11, 1 wc ", "'" unloaded. , a  qu ,nt,iy ol run, I. LI *_. .. 1... g 'I li_ ^ II* % "eaS. STeSTSr Eog Si ~ ^ng if^'SfSi which *J-S g£* ^ >Canadian port castwaa thrown out. After the e deceased lived. r sr.w the % % ! and Frank ya, D.*. were -fl c.nadWn Camtriietee is reease the daeeaaed the accused ac eued and n woman come from discharging charcoal and firewood, turning to Barbados from firm i Pmpkins were also being unloadGuiana via, Trinidad and and hemelf walked down the ,h ^i acn ,5. ' ^S A J£2F*' steps in court. While on the steps ^ey went In the direction of the aecused said "Miss Hoyte you Gov-ernmcnt H'U. Later I want have to give me that house or by lo Co\ernment hill and saw a Christ I will kill you" The decrow d *. a P> where a woman ceased then told a man by the take the name of Skeete accused In charge. Skeete an Island constable said he couldn't do anything. On January 11 the deceased laft htr home at the Tvy for a walk about 7 p-m. She (Tull) next saw her daughter lying dead In Government Hill Road sbout 8 p.m. the same day. The next day she went to the Public Mortuary and identified her daughter to Dr. AS. Cato The husband of the deceased died at the age of 42. ^ To Mr Malone Tull said tha the accused and the deceased were friendly before they lived toiether. Herman Skeete said that the accused lost a case In which he claimed money from the deceased in the Court of Appeal. After the case thc accused said that he was going to kill the deceased. The accused also said that he helped thc deceased in "putting away" her husband. About 2 pm. on January 11 he was in Carrington's Village and he saw the accused with a knife About 3.30 p.m. he again saw the aecused sharpenins the knife a piece of stone. He did not speak to the accused. About 7 P m he spoke to the deceased in Carrinston s Village and the accused came up and stood near to them and he offered to take the deceased to Government Hill . . ... The deceased left him and th accused followed her up Government Hill. About 7.30 p.m he saw the deceased lying dead in the road and the accused in the Police Vaa. ., ., Cross-ejcamined by Mr. Malylng dead." To Mr. M..lone White said that she heard that thc accused had row about a house with th DM Nd Naomi White of Goverr Pu ... f.om llu' FranklyR D.R ,,., and w m ^ spending abo.. The Tlmrthy A. H. Vanelaytaam ,wo days here before soing on to having already unloaded her Canada. She W consigned to cargo was taking in a load of Messrs. Gardiner Austin i Co rubble stone for British Guiana, L:d Other ships were being pain!*. I .. ,. ._. ind refitted preparatory to sailing, finishing touches to her hull. The If not v.vi-il but srrklnr Salvation, please write foi MII i: HOOK Which Make. GOD'S WAY SALVATION ?LAIN" R. Roberts. (..i,, i Hook k Tract Service. M Central Ave., B.iigor. M. in 1 1 ;\ lll\t,\ % DIAMOND BNOAantKNT Aattl DIAMOND WF.UDINC. RINGS AvalUble Heparately er In Seta Vour Jewellers : Y. De LIMA A. CO.. III*. .:). Broad Street deSailors were In the .ringings of sails of"the Mally N. J. the Mary M. Lewis splicing ropes, being patched and the a % tliers wire puning the 111..111 s< t,.ped and rep.lnted ^ % % VA^WalVVAJ CREPE BACK SATO* iii Kust. Pink, Grey Black. Per Yard (.old. Parchment. $3.71 MOSS CREPE in Blur Dusty Pink. C'herrv A Black Navy STAMPED CLOQUE in Crey. Peach, Olive. Blue, Black P Yard $3.07 CAVE SHEPHERD & CO., LTD. 10, 11. 12 & 13 Broad Street l! ICI.XA WAV V, .-.m IOII1. for 1 PURINA Startena 3 PURINA Growena 1 PURINA Layena I In Mask, Gtafan & (kcrkerettes. II. JJSON JONKS & CO., I.IMITK.D Itivlritiiilnr. '^WalV H %VVV\ T. C. P, 1 111 11. IV SAFE inn in AXTi.SEPTir Thu-ufh a powerful jnd penrlrallni irrmlclde. It 1 in be used sat only on Ihe skin. In thinose, throat and e^es. but also taken tnlernally. RELILVVH PAIN AND I'ROMOTLM RAPID HKAUNO ON SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES KNIGHT'S LTD. Distributors Originally For this wee roTATOEHper 10 Iba. I i0 6 < KAWKOKDH CREAM CRACKERS 1 4 1 10 RIDDVS AMI'^RAfil S SOI'I' per tin 33 30 I.ETONA CiREEN PEA HOIFP per lln IS St The Above Items for Cash and Carry easterner. Only \g^A) 1 11 ler % 1LI( III HAMsll HAMper lb sililli li\\i-ll HUIINper |b. ROt'TH \FRICAN ROCK LClBttTERper tin LION BRAND P|:RE WHITE I'EPPER per I- t '.' LION BRAND Pt'RE BLACK PEPPER per I-os. Csst:r SI liXMSH BUT CHEESEper lb I % C XMI'Rt I.I.*> CONHOMMEper tin KHI 1.1 \\ v JP.11Vper 2-lb. tin % KCM PEACHESper Jt-or tin * COCKADE EIVF RIM 8TAN8FELB, WOTT A r. LTB.

PAGE 1

TAC.f M\ BARBADOS ADVOCATr WEDNESDAT, APRIL U. ! Talma Wants Factory Nationalized MADI it THE MONKS OF BUCKFAST A.E' Tells Of Hardships EndurtM. BY Peasants The truth was. that with the burnt canes an the around, tat Mr. I. L. Miller iL) threw out democratic decision of the people he would say, not when it pleased he was tryina to % pile" them in :nr suggestion to Government ih-i taken at the ballot box by using factory owners, but a medium n>t_buylna; thatr L... s*i-.jnts hwld M used as the eeononuc weapon to try and should be struck cane weighers so that peasants frustrate the demorratie proce* wtMfhd !> % sure oi getting J lair -n d create in the mind* and heai deal. o( the people a sense of political agr-e -n % < % % w* y_^f^ g^^ond MM which He said that tha lot o( the fnistralion. That was why he lea K ue had PfoP~*. *"* 1" worn members. -nd which the peasants has been to be cheated felt that there was a crisis exist *e As v. giving tas peasant, ahort b-wrt l Assembly adjourn for five ,J mti H w  ,  u king % Tk. pracinloi.ci. ol sucr, .nmilu minutes to' discuss a matter of public importance  the racaJesa itatcmeat whan he .said i brought up for ie>jMefl '" Wave hardships peasants are suffering in the harvesting that, he observed, because he said. The Junior Member for St of their crops -.1 debate ... -tint more than lour hours b.pc !" d to know that hi. aislePhlhp had abwgbroutht to.the MS ttu. th. ttrtor, owner could ,, to   x or .^ M  "*"* meat was correct. There was a notice of tha Hou se in his own i.oi a l smls s use weigher on any fanes, ha would be paid for less ,n -' ltu _-_ __. ... as during the last crop where inimitable fashion that there was -"   *-~ During his 4U minute speech. Mr. Talma suggested that voot ,,, w  UMat somea aeethlna maas of discontent, a the Ciovcinnient should niitioii.-ilise at least une suf{ar facihina like half a ton a day. luinblina. and someihlnf was tury .i Central and big one. ui which peasants could send He hsd enquired II a prosecuaolna to happen That was not fai tf..'ii am % And to help with the smooth working of such >'>" h: 1J w J. b r" b ,C'": 'i"r",^l ",TJ^, !" ~ ., scheme. QovKipwrt should provide lorries to take the JJJ * *,"ftSi "" "" mm peasnius canes to such a foctn y. quired at the Labour Ofllce and nn overi happened in England. Divisional secretaries could be cane weighers and could not be dasThere was a limit to the endurminted On trivial grounds. nces of the suffering maaae i of A Labour Government was not ,ust flUing mu and doing h l( ( been told that they couli not the inland, he said, and If such In power when that was passed in peak oi the hardships the peasnothing or rather, not taking t  caK: taith with the industry. practices were allowed to continue l Jutland and they of the House ants were niffcniig. |hg rarthnrl OTmaOC measures wben necessary. An d the same roonery was goin order to defeat the democratic of Assembly could show the of giving short weights for then "Don't think of the co*t of thi ln on | n thi, cr0p again, he said, machinery of the island at some people where tha palm of sovercanea, the circumstance of inelr sugar factory, think of the A nnr weighing Inspector, at the forthcomini. ri a tU oata, the monster -' being told that their canes would peasants". ,. V y beginning of the crop, came or discontent would have grown be accepted on particular dayand Hc ^ (im  cr0 as a Ci where a peasant was to yy alarmln.; P~^j' .IMB| i-uu, luu ..oounm, being cheated of a third of a ton. This is u Jelloerate attempt ..I^vaw enw,^^ lu There -re oconon, when wc conaplracy to create discontent." UDsj mat the money riede muM be lu hlc hr iai d. and Speaking lor St. George pereon. pr.vaw enterprise goes into one |h|( ^ pnf ^ ^tm 1 am satisfied dry. he said, he had dlscuased the light excuse. It could even be and Ute cane-weigher receive that tha SacntUry of tha same  lg bonus at the and of the year ~ifher The point was further strceaed that this scheme fat tar v perpetrnted being turned back, and the mass of discontent whit nmong the peasants. ...a. % .. >. .Mu.Ur> ta.i. baaravat, UIHU au I.H.UIK11: not i'j ko bj ...... -. Ud> py .. iiv >aiU inui fasston ui a>a Jioi da itoer. laij (obi j Aw, anli hat IB| laid liiciu to Ui.iifc . luTii', BeCa uWOB bgtOa\ "at .oinc.i t.riKs cai*as itras ana priority had to be th< 4J1V.I. lo ban UiSUlIK .Mr. Talma said ttiat he wa P tad |>r ma pochsX, wnlle with nauoifal^^ ^ n 0l)Vl rnmCllt wuu i u qu *ation with one of theblggeat IOII, the money would oe going ^ ,*.., dvbed if tiat^d ol payland owners of tha parish. V C i, l l*" ury iOT Ine b m ul mg tbis money to inspector-, they At the baginmna; of the seaaon ""' p op ,. , -. collected I penny and a half for everyone was anxious to get his sroa ld be encouraged In any ?"! aT^t.^* .. !" ..f every ton of canes and with this an B.it,k a* H excmld be found p -V* i UM ample whore people have had to weighers when the crop was M for two years before tho> rnbhed. the loan* they applied peasants were suffcri.}k in ili< bar vast inti of ihi at the hands ol lbs lasftQ*| ou M I H. too tvanled lo on* .ittcntloii hardahis. arhlch wencreHled for ll. a ants by petty henda of certain Uo\(-rnincnt IXartaBcnts, -i -dan i refi-rrinjr to the paaaanta IAMH Bank and tie f^gboui Welfare.' he said. It H peasants by assuring them that the canes could be taken on sj particular day and then taking a ,'ioiultsh delight in telling them to ...ny them to Adams' factory. That Was nothing short of sedition a constltulioQ crisis. To encourage a man to cut down his whole income which wa* .Mr. EH Barrow (L) also spoke lo suaU | n him for the ensuing icmber for CThrlst Church, hi aid that all that he had said a to % rcusstionough ''r&^nlg^dW. mean, or that victory and tn* mmcuitie. exuusirv o( the island wn. undcimember who had spoken, repreperlenced by the pe:is.-rm were 0llli ottv ( uie eriassj ol thu n-nted a oonatituency in which the repercussions of ti Jouy, the Imperial CrOvarnrocii 1 mere were some of the l>wsw I No labourite-, owneil augs], f, % ranted a loan ol |t0,00 to psoritVictories and also n very \U0 torle* and peasants sreri au^ ^ui^r factory owner, who number of peasant* and lie w.>insults from the factory owner loemsd a Government AgnculWfJ moved by the eloquent ird Hank. Those were Uw daj ieh made by his CODJ th Assembly w. % half of the suffering |-camints. t>i i>ed of planters and nier.ii.mi> ItOl only in St. George but the  . > Lin tin i owners would benefit. Mo niatt#ri h ere was absolutely nn Wordl DOUjd damn enough such |utr| ln whul mern bers had been net..nous practice. Jy the factory -eying, "ihut factory owners were owners. refusing to reap peasants' rnnes. He had heard some of the U'cauwof any Labour % landshde' Island as a whole factory owners aay. be said, that u ; election "That money was intended lot He wa very glad, he said, that they were not responsible, ihut .It who wenb. tne ugar lndu,m motion had originated from the, did not Instruct their man'J"\ trutn £ff\ ", id, Mml it *as not t, t s side of the table because it was age.s and such Uke employees to "l !" ^^ !" ^ mD _ntil i..... % rhetl th, csanpWUon  irown a! them that they only im.1 the peasants in thst way. > r ^ert was J ura ^ ^*Pf the uOUM changed thai win,represented the water front workYet they were somewhat rcsponai* " % % % eatn.r inan^aj ijcople who were In the sugar inor. But everyone vmiUt see thnt ble and between the present and "* fa^ a ^^ | Ktu f v ou Uistry began to hencUl fi.>ni the tliey had she pessant*' interest the next crop. Government had to g u9trition n^ f year, plus the just as much a' heart ns the inwo. k out a scheme n which the f (tI ^ af ^ ne went> a mof t U( ._ tcrest of the Water front worker peasants could have their canes utual ammiM 0 j burnt canes thl l,. nottM a) m, tordei Men. [2jg in proportion a* early s< her for chiist Church brought to i*" thi Uke last of society as the caneweighern. could not be bribed? Mr. Mottley leminded the hon'ble member that he was using the wrong yardstick. The hon'ble junior member for Si (irorge had quoted two esses One of a poor old woman selling hoi canes to Lower Estate Factory and was "robbed" out of a half ton. Could the member tell tinHouse how he knew that she was r-bbed out of a half ton? Were the canes weighed before they went to the factory, or were they rop brought back and wvlfhed after" In that case then .he would not have been robbed. The hon'ble member also quoted a case St Harrow, and said that a case had been reported to the Labour Officer of short weight, .nd that no action had been taken 11. wM warning members that Ulrtsgf they not wise lo U % I I-1 int itU turn ibati Raj lii.i explained thnt he did not mean for Government to li.abl,-. But he mr.nt thai a ciwUlutl*al otlais luuay. Thar. Hi., year. ,h,Cuvernmrnl ^lould !" !" ft ^ "'*." '", f' ...-,. .. % acquur. lll., l -lu,J '''""'" '' '" "" ""' ""'" "' ' ih.il ,i,x. year lho peasants '"^! v """ t ',"":  .... MM to suitor ui the handv " """ "' % "  the farlory owner.. ''"" " """ '," "'  % "" ,vc ) honourable member who icpi.Seconding Mr. Talma's address, sent* country constituencies, thai .vtr. J. c' Mottley said that he dlu when peasants take their cane<< to .tot feel that the Government was factories utter making QartaJavarting a.s responsibility range-menus to bring the time! oi  Litlvc to th c difnculty the t,uch a date and on being given 1 asanu were experiencing in tickets to certify that the canes i .ipuig their canes. He got many will be accepted, on arriving with i 'inplainta from peasants in St the canes, they have been told i tlip. It eemed to him at. n they must take the canes to Mr. I % factory owners went out <>( Adams" factory." air way because the conservsHe wan not going to mince nnot returned to power, matters, he said. He had let*, in' he hoped that the Government work >n several oeeaslons > and mild utilise tha power that they gone to his constituency to" tind ... .u_ ._ lrue ^^ MB That, Mr. Mottley said, was a The were also cases of demnaUon of his (Mr. Miller'.) hreakdowns", as well as the dif^y^"" 1 1 ",  ... 1 He said he did nut agree \hat illUc4 , obtaining parts to Finally Mr Mottley .aid that nptlonallsatlon df one fsrtory ttect repairs, therefore, when a >'members had come to me House alone was the only way out; but 1  tory msnsger told a peasant W '", /nticlse the type of weigh whiii. the constltuUon was u.t Ids canes and get them ready, brldgae. he would understand im.-,it<>"* o com c there and make DW-ry method at then disposal to w,.I. 20 or 25 acres of burnt canes. 1^' J! *j2 11 ..,!I!I , ^h. !" gtn a lesson in democracy lo the was It not reasonable to expect Malcmenl*. calculated to do harm capitalists of this country. would reap their burnt The* peesaaTtry of Barbados, eanes first from them and lessMd. He was not In agreethat the reports peasant*) woplil be right in I i do ot with the nationalisation but correct in substanoa. L % nsviinini! did iv.i do '' t that the Government could 1-e'them face* it. he aajjoined. Il by the e: il rt ihis jretr. There il something about the matter He thought it was a most dgstaKiwa-. no point in havhl ll 'hout going to the extreme. ly thing to try to reverse the ild not be a party to it, and vMild record his vote against it f he stood alone. He knew he With all those circumstances, It would be accused of representing was therefore not true to say that big business and capitalists, but ted them to know that if Digested. To the contrary, he big businesses ana) capitalists tfculd say. that the relationship were not represented, there would % eiween capital, peasant and labe no taxes or money for labou >c ir was more harmonious, with ."easants or anybody else, uie peasants. \ulabourer and the pessant getMr. W. A. Crawferd (C> said IVgsants should aot allow ,i Ikg more beneALs In Barbados that sometime ago he suggested. it'trv owner to fool them thai when compared with any other when they were considering legi were doing them a favour by *< Indian colony [^*. tt0 £ to con,r ? 1 J" jh,lc "'''" vina thoi,% Everv ton of nc P 01 "' which thp senior that the manufacture of suaia'^ b.ouiht in to % ^ uSsant ' r,ber for St. George had made should be regarded 5ru iT^enu in the ^cuWv "' whlch he re l Th ' wo ,jt l ''>'prt Ihe peasant no favour when he regard the manufacture of *ugar i, because he was es a public utility service. Factory although they might not always see eye to eye with the labour Partyprobably because of life thpre WM th ,, mi]i  a9 hfld been ..-.viiude unuar which they had been brought up. should still be defended. About 17 to 20 per cent of the island's sugar was produced publl ir^'S^XS^lST^L bo^-ffhu laVlng a profit. That being so. I .me*. So the question arose as to when the factory owners should h( ,^ C ould they then argue "that quotas gltajt the peasants'* canes. Thui u lh oign he was making a profit should be made to fix for receiving peasants  Oa Page I TTISOITUN-SURPRISING bow quickly badtacba, mrf. % cblog i: in or Joint.. henibago. rhoiTiatik paim and cooirodn urinary troubles due b> bnpuritiet In the blood can be ovefcomc Strong, actrie kidneyt sslcgusrd your healili by % tr..n .I-.R Trr.rHirifles and harmful \>a.tr> oat of V niem. When WJ'V ann la insdequstr tiui bsl. io alter the Mood propcrlv. Atyour OeeJsr % % % % ,.. 11 town aJsreuc and asioarf i iiiiMpik;. Many Uaouaandi of -i ui mm and woinen lurva % Milled to Ihe good hodlh icy have regsjaad by tilaag i > l on' PUh. \Jracefullv Modtm Vjistinctly Wolstlt? .V*v**'*** .','-'.-. '>'..; if lrt l asaaasTBacs*;.( iidwVUU^mW It I If A .... HOPPER BICYCLE % THE BARBADOS FOUNDRY LTD. Onifcr : MeirlianclUe: While Park Koad Si Mirluiel 4.120 Workshop : 4.541. 452S MM -< n BBdW^ n J, o B*jOgig*>t Ai sodal e\-enU you'll see lhe.c tine can srnve with the dignity which mawh-^ die iriagiubocni of the occasion. When you rsssaj a Wobelcy you will own a car thst esp-crtes modern tviinic as people of good taMi-pn-fcr itin ii'ii-( tornlotu whi,h pi. .Unn : in and roil while you iiavd DeWllt'iPllli tp midt ipcnil) *< % If you get sharp stabs of pain in your back wben you stoop and, at ouVr tunes, there n a dull snd continuous ache, the cause can very often be traced to the kidneys. These vital organs should filter poisons oat of the system but aoroetimcB they get fclugKish and congested and l* yon jiiflvr is Natures way you that your kidneys need assistance. A trust'd isediciiie for .his purpose i* De Witts PUks. They have a cleaning Sod snuMptic action on the kidneys, helping to soothe theui, tone them up and isstor* Ibem to function naiuially. There it a long record of success behind De Witt's Pitts, which havr bssa relieving iifferera in many parts of Uie world for crer half a century. If you could r**d even a few of the grateful letters sent in by backache suftrren who have found relief after taking De Witt's Pills yon would realize that your suffering may also be unnecessary. Why not try liveni for your trouble? They may be uist what you need. Go to your chenust and get a stpply nght away. OUR GUARANTEE De Witt's Pius % made under strictly hygienic eondiUons and conform to rig id -vundard* ot purity DE WITTS PILLS for Kidney and Bladder Troubles tOHT ROYAL .AH M.I l.'l'll. Pboae 238S Sole Distributors Phou 4S04 .,-.-.-. ,-,-..-.-.-.-..-,-. Wm. FOttARTY (ms) ITD. TAILORS OF PROVEN RELIABILITY AND EXCELLENT FITTERS We catty a wide range o/ HIGHGRADE SUITINGS to choose Itom \ OUR GUARANTEED itf) cuniNG AND TAILORING WILL TRANSFORM YOUR CHOICE INTO A si I I OF lISTI.\i IIO.V | Wm. FOGARTY (TNS) ITD ,*---*,-,-.',-.-.'.*.*-'--.---,-*-'*-' I

PAGE 1

l llMsllli M'llll 16 1952 BARBADOS ADVOCATE k % V l Government Takes Over Land For Constructing Road THE House of Assembly last ni^ht approved of Government's acquiring compuhorUy H'.ulO square feet of land iieid under three separate ownerships at Foul Bay for the % Mirpose of constructing a road to provide easv access to the Jbeach nl Foul Bay. % % * land is at present held in BtrucUon of a new road on  new ir raDnring areas: 2.M sq. % onainK lo ibe eclair ff 1 Ha opined thai if the govcrntitUlscd the site of the ftrd. and 6,863 -g ft baloostni "old" road, u miiht have been I the estate of Abel Clarke possible to have the road IOII% eaaaad), strutted at lass expense. It was Members ..f the "COIHian" highly possible, however, that theI f the OpposiUon compll*naeri mijihi have decided that d Government on the steps ,l www.be cheaper to construct 10 BCOVtta the road, and K < U !T ] new ro J J" lbe ,e Cl expediliHh ^.' h *>' Proposed to acquire. Govern. "SS.5SfSi expres-d th. f^t!it^r !" a^^TJ^ I h P c ,haI when lh "> %  had been of nptat a sh shed, | an.1 completed. Government would % % JJ* en-ct a fish shed, and possibly a ; bathlnf, shed fur the convenience % V *2g t on Mr of Iho fishermen and those uno % ** % ,,U ,L or baUtioa pur" poses. Mi < i.iwfurd recalled how the alter of a road ut the spot was rnix'd by himself with members if ihc si I'lutip Vestry in HMO. nd bow In 1 Ml. he asked the first quootton In tin House of Assembly on the matter if itl Ibutod the move taken by Mr. Garner in the matter some construction of the road time later to his (Mr. Crawford's) CB-tant to the ilshniK asklnit bun to table it. his position _try. because during the prcsin the House at the time being % nshing season and last year, inch thnt he could not himself % > found that if portion bf the do so, and after suKttesUng that % were done, it would enable Government should do something men to get U Into preserve the surplus fish which % Is often 'thrown Into the sea", he W l y better remuneration to urged government to act expediBalvoB, ii""i-i> MI the matter. Mr J iMnttley , junior Mr. I, 1>. Mllle, lE> said that tnl"'! i' St. I v stranct' th.it in some B-nment for bringing forward case.-. print* broaty would break % Bneasure, and said that -this down and in other cases it would asP" ti !* .1 " C ^ ."£ trough. H* was hoping that % marked from the outset with no nd acqu i. mnn b y the GovfeiS 0 Wl ?L l ?Jl!^l£rl ornment w.-uld n..t be like the ri'vemonts  changes which .,__..i p..__ ..mi. y would vote for and from Jfr** 0 .* !" -. .T**".^ "* many would benefit. ,h,n s happcmnK lik. this, we Mmtley was proud of the must feel thnt the wrong people ...a. IILHi a member of the " advising Government. % Be at this lime", and also He was warning Government to ajt these changes are being be cautious because all was not Sght about by a 1-abour Govwell. He felt that the GovernBrirnt Hi expressed the hope m-"nt should acquire Randy Lane M when the history of the Se.sWoods and Hevwoods for making % was being written. UMN b:.thing beaches for the public. pt be nothing done, or left utithe the hod to % hud, and added that i  i (in: li net t Fmil y \. long overdue, and added I fishermen and members of public bad to perform "acro% feats" to reach the beach. n importanco of Say to the fishing industry of colony, ho hi>[ed that he % n have tho satisfaetido of % a that the government cornfad the road to the aatitfiK-tlon i hcnellt of the community at paid a brlbub) to tni  .i Mr. Oavner In his tod nd urged government % Miller (I.) also cumIn the House Yesterday T*i HUUM ol Aawmby mr% >rlrnU> at Th rollowini paper* war* JU by Di. limn on which Price Control ku been rvmovMl iluiiiiit 1801 it. Civil Eaubtutimviii lOrneril* iAm*ndm 1 Orcirr. ISSS Da  -. at i WHI..II. i r-.i II.,.< oj Mi Qssnts Wm i i.i ! i. (\.mi>lroller for Urvaloprnant M I" U.. KM hMIH. Dr. Ciunmllu Uvr nuU of thr f..l% twhn; H"..luilon to approv* Iho ralaa of rm 11 lie rat Ion paid lo Die Chairman ana manibar. of II.* Public Brvtc Conuniaippmir lh* Order enCMablahmenl lOviumtlt Order. ISSI." mada trts :be h p -no urgen Kovcrnineiu nwolullon lo Ml lip mini "Tha Clvl ftF E. Miller (I.) also cum.p-m-il nde Mr, Garner's efforts, and  "he Governor-liv-rxaculivr Commute* au> Ml great persistence and ?T.' h *' '*"'*"""'" % % of March. ralutls hurled at Mr. Gainer J^ c"tf B^I^'ACI! mF* en ned the Mlbject nf RamhiUon u place in nim of S3.*so % Bad. He was sorry that Mr. -i me diapoMi of the aovemot-n. . nm %  U> hear Ovaj CoamaiM to % upplemanl the EMIKmseli the expressions of ^fe S^^ZS^iSlSfL"faS 0 ^ MW. A. Crawford n lar mmmUtK the iwhun mdu-irv lay to the Public Road, tor ihr P rMectlw ., 1h d ,^oi rt in. OOVMIWT adVnnl4fte of havinK -ln.Enn.llv* CommlllM lo .uBDlammt % ir. . In mnki-the-land ' COODCrMr J r T lliaier Ubled quni .u,i ffavf. been m nomd "uiidina propulsory Land Ac, T ,T& c 0 n #n,w **an ( T1.SM> HI f( l Una at WillV. u.,.,,1 l,k v """^ ,or '"'""Sins pUtliui siound >e\V KiWll Bl e.tbury aehool. hat a number o[ peojil. n s in* aov*rnor-u>.gcullv* fnng why the GovernB.G. RACING RESULTS GEORGETOWN. April IS. FIRST DAY Summer Slakes, li Furlongs CUKH 1 ALARM, 127. (Apham) 2 BLACK BEAUTY, 126. (Sunich) 3 BRIGHT STEEL, 12. (Campbell) 1 min. 18| aecs. Durban Slakes. 1 Mile. ClaasF 1. SAGA BOY, 110, (Sunich) 2 PENSIVE. 124. (Campbell) 3. MILLIONAIRE. 124, (Singh) 1 min 36 sees. Easier Slakes. 6 Furloncs. Class D 1 AUCTION BRIDGE, 10, (BeUe) 2 SWISS ROLL, 111. (Sinlh) 3. RUSHFEL. 117. (Beekles) 1 min 17 sees. I .ui.in.i Slakes. 6 Furlongs. Class A2 1. ETOILE DE FLEURS. 11, (Beckles) 2. ORCHIS, 12S, (Wilder) 3. HDRT WALVIS. ll. (Sunieh) 1 min 14J aces. I ...!>;.Slakes. 7 Furloncs. Class C. I GOLD1E. 116. (Beckles) 2. UGLY. 115, (Belle) 3 GOLDEN ARROW, 120. (Gobln) 1 nun. 32 sees. SECOND DAY Colony Slakes. 6 Furlongs Class A2 1. ORCHIS, 109. (Wilder) 2. ETOILE DE FLEURS. 126, (Bcvkles) :i DOUBLE LINK, 126, (Campbell) Time: 1 min: 15| sees. Durban Handicap, fi Furlongs. Class F 1. SUN WATCH. 116. (Aphan) 2. GOLDEN ARROW. 112. (rMdool 3. SURPRISE PACKET. 122. (Gobln) 1 min. I6| sees. Summer Handicap. 5 Furlongs Class H 1. CRACKER JACK, 117. (Patrick) 2. ALARM. 134. (Aphan) 3. OLIVIA. 121, (Beckles) I min. 5| sees. Easter Handicap. 7 Furlongs. Class D 1. I'.l-.U'K SHADOW, 128, (Gobln) 2 SWISS ROIJ.. 12. (Heckle.) 3. AUCTION BRIDGE. 116. (Belle) 1 min. 131 aces. President's Slakes. 6 Furlongs Class E 1. JUST BY CHANCE, 111. (Wilder) 2. SURPRISE PACKET. 114. cNl,..l 3. MILIONAIRE, 111, (Singh) 1 min. 181 tea. Directors' Stakes. 1 Mile. Class C I DOWNUPSI, 124, (Belle) 2. BLACK SHADOW. 109, (Naidoo) 3 ANNA TASAN. 112, (Aphan) I min. 52| sees. Clulana H'cap Class A. 2 1. DOWNUPSI 114 (Belle) 2. ORCHIS 132 (Wilder) 3. DOUBLE LINK 120 (Campbell) 1 Min. 29! sees. I*de Heap One Mile Class O. 1. OUVIA 109 (Sunwlch) 1. GOLDNIF. 128 (Beckles) SIR LASSIE 117 (Aphan) I min. 54| sees. Presidents ll'csp Class K 1. TAKEN 106 (Bell) 2. MILLIONAIRE 121 (Slnjh) 3. SAGA BOY 121 (Sunrieh) 1 min. 53 sees. E.E.C. Surpass Previous Records The thirty-third annual gener.i. meeting of tin I Electric Company. Ltd.. was held n March 27 in London. MR GEORGE H. NELSON, KC.G i M I.Mech.E M I E.E (Chairman and Managing Direck:) presided, and in the course of his speech, said : closet conornlc worfcinf, be.wx" Turnover and production have tne vassntries of llv Commonagain be*?n substantially increased wealUa.rnuit benefit the Commonin volume and value during the wealth aa a whole, and were enyear and the net profit has risen couraaad by the declsrjtton made by £203.98* to C 1.132.S50 thu* in after the meeting of tltc FUwncc all respecU creaUng recoeds over Mlalstcrs in London of (heli determi .ation to co-opei-a'c in buildpast achievement Distribution of Profits The expansion of the company's business, the rtslnf costs on both capital and revenue accounts, and ing L,> the conornlc stability of the (' % 'mmonwealth. Oui Canj i*nipny now has works 'e counservative profit distribuUon policy. ""'** w further tho economic and It is proposed, therefore, lo strategic itrenjth of the Commontransfer £590,000 to the gener.il wealth reer\'e and to pay a tlnal dividend We % .11 continue to make every of 10 per cent. less inccme-tax on posslb:: year. Inflation remains threat to our national econ*.inv. We wish it to be widely inown that the level of prciita in our company is extremVlv modest and docs not contribute to the lowerbustnoss to-day. \V..ikini: within the Commonwealth Wo hove always belie, 1 UtaJ | plant, transformers and switchgear made in the United Kingdom. In Australia our new factory ut % r.slxinu continues to Increase its output, but costs have creased here too. the tow orders on the hornsworks for the Australian market bag steadily continued. In aptte of the new restrict tuns on Imports of dome*.tlc products, there Is no restriction or substantial recession in demand for capital goods which Australia has placed >ui gad Son limited show a substantial increased net praOt. Tha nan paiiy has a substantial part to play in the country's rearmament programme, includuig the producUou of Kolls-Koyce "Avon" aero engines, The Marconi's Wireless Tclegraph Company Limited and The Marconi IillamataBnil Marine Communication Company Limited have both again had a successful year. The Marconi Companies' leadership of research in their special electronics field Is acknowledged all over the world and has been maintained In 19.-.1. The report and accounts were unanimously adopted. At .i subsequent catra-ordinory general meeting the proposrd Increase of the company's authorised capital to £10.000.000 by UM cn.itlon of a further 2.000.000 Ordinary shares cf £1 V4Kh % 01 nn i, Talma Wants Factory Nationalized 3. Ifarbour Log In Carlisle Bay w. M iitruttlna ipalr the "old" ,. n Road. What was being st Philip to the i-inn load leadins me read *h to construct an enffy j. % % ?? ^'"T 1 "* ,d a little above the SJf t '"'" * d *' % n, MM] there must Mi Talma moved the adlmnnment of % % uifludmced fn^'^.'^VheiTVani. toc ""*""* iibandoq the "old" f,^ n u%e ,dl4.iiit>e-l ufitll next Tueirk upon the conday  % i p.m. sh n.ii I E SmlUi, >Vh Mary H Lewli. Sch Srh Cvtlt-rama O Sch Stall &rh United Pllfrrlm S Sch taidy Snelxen. M V T U lUdal, Sch l*rai>k:>n I> H ..KBrVMJI Srh FRANK!.VK D R S3 tom pel. CBDI Sealv from BnlUh OuUna M V CARAfAS InS ton* net. Capt Vale-qkiei. from Trlnldaa I.I I V. I I IK Srh MARION BEIJX Wf>I JT T* ton* reft dpi Vary, tor Brtlial. Guiana. M V CAC'IQUr del CAR1BE. 101 i i>i Tmmp. for Dominica Srh rRANCCB W SMtTll. ? ILantrl. for Rntiih Oula ttt BAIVROW M 15 torn nrt, Capl Marki. for h; Vincenl  From Page g canes and this in general would insure conditions for the peasants. With reference to the Peasants Loan Bank and the labour Welfare Fund, he agreed with Mr. Talma that there was a lot of dissatisfaction. In so far as the Bank was concerned, anyone wanting to borrow money had to establish hl claim and members knew the difficulties which some people encountered when trying to prove that tho land on which they are living* Is .heirs. The ense of the Labour Welfare Fund is similar. He was told thit the cases where there are congestion are given priority. Mr. J. E. T. Brancker said that the peasants In St. Lucy suffered wors than pennant* of the other parishes because of the tsaographical position of St. Lucy. lie said that factory owners have been telling peasants to take their canes to various members of the House. Fortunately the appeal of the peasants was heeded hv the "poor people's factory" In St. Joseph. Any shrewd businessman could suffer a loss for a year or two if he felt thit through that loss he could regain the position he formerly held. lie said that he suggested in 1049 that Government should give favourable consideration to thr nurchasr of one of the factories in Stl-ucvBroomeflcld. Before any talk of natlonalisa'.inn. Qovernment should first one rate a factory and find out if it would be n success. If Government had Its own fnctorv trucks could bring the peaants* canes from all over the itland to this factory. Mr. Branrkrr also suggested 'hat thev start Instituting a scheme fo-".nine. Mr. Bianckcr challenifed miv iber of the House lo deny that in the numerous Instance*In which there had been found to be dl*% repanctck in the recorded weight of cams they were not always in the favour of tho factory owner rather than the peasant. He refer red to what he described as "that black day" of 1047April I7lhwhen a case of "robbery" was discovered at a factory in St. Lucy, and asked whether it was not of mure than passing strange, nr whether one believed In coincidences, that such 'mi-takes'' and "en-ors" were made In favour of the factory owners. He charged that the factory owners perpetrated the "dlshon;ty" of the euiu* weighers in transferring them to another office In the -ame employ, and called It riheer "window dressing." Mr. Hi-anckrr said tha tho peasants were at th 0 merry of the Candy Mix Exported TWO thousands bags of powdered eandy mix were being shipped yesterday from the lower wharf to the S.S. JUosrapshf-r which also loaded sugar for the United Kin*dom. The powdered candy mix which made of arrowroot starch and sugar at Wakefield, St. John, is going to a firm of candy makers in London. factory owners, as well as vtctli of political and economic "reactlon" and "repercussions", tho factory owners being willing to m> i Hi" I/a ton to victimise ln~ peasants. He urged that Government should make a decision in the matter, and suggested either Ihc zoning system whereby factories would take the canes of all peasants In a particular area, or Iho other step of purchasing a G eminent factory which would grnal 1-ai.aiits' canes He hoped that Government would do something concrete In tho matter In time for the next crop season. At B W pm Mr. F. la Waleoll moved the aajournment of the House until noxl Tuesday, and this was carried steas can. BREATHE FREELYU :<3lB-STUFFID NOSI... 31//CK AS A MfATMl f-wsi CAM? FOCKirHANDWicksInlaleTwiihyou Anytime your noac il. stuffy (mm a cold, a whiff or two saves you cool, clear breathing imlantlv. It'i small but packed with effective natal rnedl(-IU-II. So pkasantl And Virtu Inhaler is safe use as often as you please. VICKS INHALER "The Longest Wearing Tyre Ever Built" Firestone CLEANS AS IT LUBRICATES Btassssi T Iht Villaqi Sxclusioe Shopping Centre *** DECORATION HOUSE: Anllqaes, GilU. V. DE LIMA & CO: China, Jewellery, Gifts ADVOCATE CO.: Book Shop, Slsuone. j. CARIB SHOP: Carves! Mal.oi.-sny. Native Barbadian Wares. Indian Bags and Beits. GRETSTONE GALLERIES: Completely new Technique, designs and Finishes in Barbados Pottery. STANSFELD SCOTT CO: Wines. Spirits and Groceries. THE ENGLISH SHOP: Materials blocked by hand, Skirls, Shirts, Shorts. iil il IN \ LTD: Gowns, Lingerie, Gilts, etc. FITNESS rftn FLATTERY J Voull lo%e the fl of ihrse tleck. .ilky'Acilc*. undict nevt to youc tViskThe fsbtic has been usecially designed for mnuimlm to keep your body At a iomf oruttMe *cn tcmpeiature ii or cold. These dain ... bt*ia-ad share lain lt "HaTl!*rt) and gi\* yean | Aerres in all principal ilores. A sprinkle of Vim on a damp clotha quick rub  and those dirty, greasy things Will sparkle like new again Vim leaves surfaces shining and gleaming, so quickly and easily! VIM cleans everything smoothly and speedily SPECIAL OFFERS Hemmed Sheets, Superior Quality 72" x 100" $ 6.25 BLANKETS 46" x 72". $2.50 Flowered Bamberg SILKS, per yd. $1.32 1IOYAL STOKE 12 High Street EX JOY I III. PITAS!WES OF I I l\. ON CLUB POINCIA.VA: Guest Kwuis. Bar, Restaurant. EXTRA MOTOR OIL URENDA BEAUTY SALON: Ladies Hairslreasinx, Beauiy treatment. / \^ap. crlasttngs. 12 Hifh Street .Jfcfifx OBTAINABLi: AT BARBADOS HARDWARE CO. LTD. No. IS Swan St. Phone 2107, MM or 3534 f li t % i ?:-=-=" I'Vii S

PAGE 1

\\ll>\ls|l\, MMIII IC. 1*S2 IIVKIUIWIADVOCATE I'M.I MVhA Government Takes B '£'J**£E!p n i ^ RESULTS Uver Land ror E.E.C. Surpass Previous Records Constructing Road THK House of Assembly last nijjht approved of Government's aequlrini: compulsorilv 19.010 square feet of land held under three separate ownmhlpi a: Pool Bav for thu C rpose of constructing a road to provide easy access to the ten at Foul Bay. .Jw! 1 "!? ** at P r ^ cM hel f new road on a new the following areas: 2.889 sq. n. site. belonging lo Ihe estate of E. S. Ii if the govcrnFjeld; .4SB sq. ft. by Phoabs K. '"n\ had utilised the MV ward, and 6,463 sq ft. belonging "old" road. U miht have been to the estate of Abel Clarke Possible to have the roski eon(deeeaaed) structed at last expense. It was Members of the Congre>n" highly possible, however, that the. section of the Opposition conipliengineers might have decided that mented Government on the steps l wo "W be cheaper to construct ntirely new road on the site which they proposed to acquire, and that was why Government acted as they did. Mr Crawford expressed the hope that when the road had been completed. Government would h shed, and possibly a bathing shed fur the convenience of the fishermen and those v. no use the beach for bathing purMr. Crawford recalled how the % roail ut the spot was ---raised by himself with member*  "I ^ Earner) who of lhe Sl rhltl Vct)rv 1WU four jmn ago asked a and how in 18,1.V asked the lirs n the House of AsscmsUni Foul ulv on ,,. lllilUl r *" 2 5V*!S T,x fH% ttrlbuted the move taken I.-..ul (onslrurtion by Mr Garner in the matter some construction of the rood time later to his (Mr Crawford's) Important to the fishing asking him to table it, his position industry, bccnu5o during the presi:i the House at the time being cm nanlDfl WMOQ and last year, such that he eould not himself it was found that if portion nf the do so. and after suggesting that it would enable Government should do something taken to provide tho road, arid urged Government to act expediUfts constriiiCrawford suggested thai ment should consider the possibility of erecting a Its!: nvenienee of the people who use v Introducing the Resolution Mr F L Wakott, > reach ihe beach. In view of the Importance of the Bay to the fishing industry of the colony, he hoped that he would have the satisfaction of % finingthat the government com( % ..mpirollCT lor Dav.4optr.aal In ihe Ifouse Yesterday The IIOUM of An I v m. II,. fttah) < mrl yailatday ware laid by Dr. pagan l llama on which Price Control hai bnn rvinovrd durinf ISil 2 Civil EMatilinhmam Ucnarali lAmend* BMBSJ No 1 Order. I MI DrvttopBiaiii and Wr Hurst in the Wnl H4....I b, HI, Gaoiea Sari W.r.1 Indira. ii of the community at large. Ha I 0 paid I tribute to the persistence of Mr. Garner in his efforts to get a naiil cc to the Bay. and urged government lo speed up construction. Mi F E. Miller (L) also com.lAmmdmmii No. 1 OTlfr. ISM.'" md mended Mr. Garner's efforts, and by ih* oovamor-in-Rsvcuiiv* committra .nrt W.-lf^ir Ur. CuiRpsoliillon to approv* lh rain of nmunrruion paU lo lh Chalrmon arux iTwinberi of lha Public SMrvle* Commii". rlav or Match. .i.>n> ..( mln.n 3 or i r.4ablinhninl Art. IStf. RaMluUon lo plar* Ihe um or S3.W0 I HIP .1I.I-...1 ,.l \b* a*n-Mnor.|n-Kar.-IMS) lo *U)i|>! via n't thv Futi..'. ri II. Capital, a* ihown in Ul* Suppk-inruurv tC-timatm. IW W. Mr. W A. I':., . .. H iin.led an AM to m*nd Ihe SIMIIJC lUnk Art. 11)4 Mr. Wakoll save notice ol:Bill mtllDled an Act to makr pn>. vlilon for anlitlnii the flihlnc mdiuitv for the prof act Ion of prraona cnsasol ".alien connrcied Evn rsealled hli are it i" i dstenca ind  ihe rebuffs hurl* t ;.t Mr Gamer ,,'.;: ;! Whan he mentioned the sdb)ect of that road. He u an) to hear for himself the expnill of his lalKiur^. Mr. W. A. Crawford (C) said that they were nt long last getting down to the business of acquiring some land for the purpose of constructing a road laa dtn l from Foul Bay to the Public Road. He expressed regret that the owners of ihe land had not been co-operative enough, knowing he advantage of hav the road done. M to make the land '" K.9. Guiana Heap Class A. Z 1. DOWNUPSI 114 (Belle) 2. ORCHIS 132 (Wilder) 3. DOUBLE LINK 120 (Campbell) 1 Min. 291 sees. Lodrr II rap One Mile Class G. t. OLIVIA 109 (Sunwich) 2. GOLDN1E 128 (Beckles) 3. SIR LASSIE 117 (Aphan) 1 min. 54| sees, President* II r.s, '^untry can be made svsilmake it wise, in the Interests of ab !" '* the development of the the shareholders, to follow a con"eonom.c rtsources of those counservative profit distribution policy. u,e '" further the economic and It Is proposed, therefore, t*. strateaustrength of the Commontransfer £550,000 to the IssMral wealtii reser\'e and lo pay a final dividend We ill continue to make every of 10 per cent, less inccme-tax on posslbk contribution to bulhi up the Ordinary stock for the year Industry and to fosler the ex^L n fJ* Ki ^' r !f!' HSi 1 "^* ch n *" f ^""moditles within tho t ? JLJ' ,"' divW .' ;r % to,al Comm ..wealth so that the mlerof 15 per cent leas income-tax.  c ,. lch nuDt Cin ^ J !" T for the >ear.Jcsv.n, : Omjtnj,., mto ^ t r ^ ltomv ^ ^ .-hull and M) approach the of A ilngle economic unit. Continued Expansion Overseas i... forward at £477.181. which £ 188.434 more than las', year. Inflation remains a serious threat to our national economy We wish it to be widely Vnown that the level of pn.HU In our company is extremely nvdent and does not contribute to th lower'" taiiada our subsidiary. John ing of the purchasing power of I'"* 1 Company, Ltd., raised furththc £. ei capital to finance Its expanding Increased Exports bujlne-> Your company has taken By heavy capital expenditure "P sUgMly more than Its due proafter the war on pltn' and teportion of these new shares, and search equipment, by intensive w n Ow own a 54 per cent, interselling efforts in our raarfcfts cat In Die Canadian group. throughout the world, and stupendous, efforts by our production In South Africa product ion at executive!, the company has Ino"*" Bsnonl works has again increased Its turnover since 1948 by creased, but costs there are still £24 million and raised the perhigher than In this country. We ccntage of Us exports from 20 per are fortunate thai our South cent, before the war to 50 per cent. African company continues to reof ,?.T*? lly K r ater vjfume of celva .ubslanllal orders for power plant, transformers and switchgear made in the United Kingdom. bUaflMM ..-b>ino continues to increase its output, but costs have increased here too; the flow of orders on the home works ( % % : tnAustralian market has stcadll) .-ontinucd. In spite ul the new restrictions on Imports of domestic products, there la no res tuition or substantial recession u demand (or capital goods for which AusTalla has placed -nbatannal oiders with us. Research and l>eveUpmcn'I have referred to some of the fields of research and development in which we are engaged. To give you an overall pictu of its measure, I would say that we now employ about 6.000 people, scientists, designers, engineers, draughtsmen and craftsm for our own and sponsored i search and associated design and development. Involving an expenditure of C6> million annum. This, of course, does not include work on products like hydro-electric. steam generating nor steel works plant, which are normally des!~ suit the application. Group Activities The accounts of D. Napier and Son Limited show a substantia.l} increased net profit. The coftv paiiy has a subttantial purt t< play in the country's isksroia* ment programme, uicluduig ihe producUon of Rolls-Royce "Avon" aero engines. The Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company Limited ami The Marconi International Marine Communication Company Limited have both again had a successful year. The Marconi Companies' leadership of research in their special electronic field Is acknowledged all over the world and has been maintained in 1951. The report and accounts were unanimously adopted. At a subsequent extra-ordinary general meeting the proposed Increase of the company's authorised capital lo £10,000.000 by the rrt.illon of a further 2.000.000 Ordinary shares of £ 1 each > approved* Talma Wants Factory Nationalized i. lha rocnpuUory arqul.iuon of 71.SM >q l*f of land at Wth*f i-riLinim pU>ina around al Wr.lb-iry School llemlittrfpti for lha compulaory arqui% itMn by tha Oovarnoi -= Kxei Coiimilifi(if an arra of land for Uw purpose of conaiructlna > road laadlns from rtl Bay hrach In tha paiiih of SI I'hilip lo tha publlr mad which rum tram PL Mailin'* Chaprl via ftir*. to Ihp Crane mid i. d-ianaird Highway N Mr Talma mowad lha adJuornmant of Hem ifarbour Log In Carlisle Bay Sch W I, r-mkU. Srh Tlmothv A II VanaluHman. Srh HirdiUv II. Srh n.rl I E Snulh, Srh Soa-ratW. trh Mary M lwii Sch Burma D. .. !" <> S It ASUUVAXa Srh r*RANKI.YN O R tt tnrw nrl M V CARACAS. IB* lona nat. Cap! Valatqu.!. frm TrlnldaO |.| IM 1 I II Sch MARION IiriJX WOIJT. 1 ton* r.rl, rapt Etarv. for Brltlmh Oulana. si v rAciQi-r. . C .ipt Twrnp. I..r IXnuntfa Sili FRANCfH W ^MlTll M assi irl CaM llaaarl. for Brill.!. Guiana . badlan Wares, Indian Bags and Bells. CKKYSTONF GALLERIES: Completely new Technique, deslfas and Finishes In. Barbados Pottery. STANSFELD SCOTT CO: Wines, Spirits snd Pr o c s t ies. THE ENGLISH SHOP: Materials blocked by hand. Skirts, Shirts, Shorts. urn l\ \ LTD: Gowns, Lingerie, Gifts, / % > " MB CLUB POINCIANA: Bar, Restsursnt, '^ Guest Roosns. BRENDA BEAUTY SALON: Ladles Hairdressing, Beauty treatment. moral \£ap. criastings. FITNESS .^foe FLATTERY J Yoall love the reel of ihcie tleek. JJ Silky'AfMet undies nel to >o ^;. skinThe fabficlui. been .penally ajoeugoed for mfu*rtJ**iuilait lo leep your hody at a comfortable C

PAGE 1

tAC.r. six BARBADOS ADVOCATF. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1. if* Talma Wants Factory Nationalized ADf T THE MONKS OF BUCKFASI Tells Of Hardships Endured IK Peasants Mt f l_ MlHer ID threw out democratic cteoision ot the people he would say. not when il plMtd h, ',V* tI 2'S5J ~ s £*" them to -.tie jugv % ii.ra*ni thai taken at the baUot box by using factory owner*, but a medium 1 DUJUUJ in* Civil Servant* should be used as the eeonomlc weapon to try and should be struck. g*M peasants frustrate the democratic proce Ai i giving me peasants snort would be Bur* of jetting a fair and create in llie mindi. and heait< weight, aw OM not WjWM baarasslly n eaL of the people a sense of poi. i % ** 'he tn*thod We colHe said thai the lot of tte frustration. That was why he leanue had proponed, r The truth ournt ranea  peasants' can the burn thai with the the ground, the had to remain reaawJ ,i mi ,i peasants he* been to be cheated fel thai there was a crisis existowner should continue to pay ( ^ i by the scale* of some of the fee, n g in their constitution. % !" -eighers, but HM h Mgf* h-d  1 ( '" h )' v tones. He wns not making Th. practitioners of such should ph-wiW be appomtecl D y u He-aanu Hnv|fli FOLLOWING A MOTION by Mr. C E. Ti l;iv that Ihe House of Assembly adjnurn lor nye lorlCfc H, WM not making The prnrtfrttonera .. minute-; Ur discuss a matter nl public importance  the naattaaal statement when he -said i-e> brought up for sedition. grave hardships peasants are suffering in the harvesting that, he observed, because he said. The Junior Member for St of their crops  a debate tasting more than four hours happened to know that his ment was correct. There w % aawJJd ..... rasa during the last crop where inimitable fashion that there was During his 4U minute speech. Mr. Talma suggested that t itOOT pe^a,,! WM losing some.. *ihing mass of discontent.  the Government should nationalise at least one sugar facthing like half a ton a day. rumbling, and something was ton | C. ntnl and big one, l, which peasant* could send He had enquired if a proaecugoing to happen That was not far m And to help with -he smooth working of such "-"tgTgM SZLSSL*** "" ^ a scheme. Government should provide lorries to take the ()one He hid a,^*^ enThere was a html to the endurI to such a fji quired at Ihe Labour Office and ancea of the suffering masses of atlon' If such existed. And t ;e *ould necessarily be provisitiilip bad already brought to the IT that the factory owner could notice of the House in Ms own not dfaanias the weigher on any slight excuse. It could even be that the Sec r et a ry of the ines The iecond point members, and which the lember for St. George .tressed was "that it seemed IVIOUS thai 1-ane-weighers had instruction* to carry on a scheme 01 robbing whereby. If the pesant sent in his six or eight tons of canes, he would be paid lor lees. and the cane-welgher receive a ng bonus at the end of the year union could be cane weigher f he point was further % treased *u>h happened in England. Divisthat this scheme was perpetrated ional secretaries could be cane b" fatterv owner 1 % veighcrs and could not be da*_* . "Mot.ley rhalie : jssed on trivial ground*. A Labour Government was not non'ble member of the need I Bousa .,(. 1 of discontent which 1: nmong the peasants. .. u. .Mouley Ifci. Baejgvei 10 go b. peas-nib canes to such a lu> quired at Ihe Labour Office and ancea of the sun* !" .* % .> % -  ,* Limur iwvmimwi* -* *_. ... itea just OUlng seats and doing had 5^^ told that they could not the Island, he said, and If such in power when that was p ass ed in "J % g % "ryfgL' BP 71,wdln peak 01 uie hardships the peasnothing or rather, not taking hTt aK f a |(h with the industry t .ri.rllce* were allowed to continue England and they of the House A_ pfu' anv 'of the ants were suffering, the method orastic measures when necessary Aj,.. lhe ,,. roonery was goin order to defeat the democratic of Assembly could show the  ._,.. -,, wouM ,-., of giving short weights tor their "Hunt think o* the co-t of the lng on m this cron aaaln, he said machinery of the island at some peopls where the palm of .over.h-a-.iv-. n the handa of a canecane,, uie circumstanee of melr angar factory think of the A canc wf^tn, rnspector, at the orthc-mung elections, the monster u g being told that their canes would peasant*". ,. prv beginning of the crop, came of dUcontent would have grown chamber (lurt  __ lW Kgoatlon He suggested that raembe accepted on particular days and H h H ^ us ^ h^ across a case where a peasant was to very alarming proportion* !" lutLi '.* IZ1^LJZSSmiAb* !" wn0 ma  uch n accusation then be.ng turned back, and the .,17^^-^^"^ bpln C>W,l d f thlr l ( l " "^ d# l !" W '**"?* l wS*?Sd h^tS? STgaTln * """ >"* *" yardstick ^Jft&ZnJSZZ '* are oeca-on. when we piracy to create distent." ^f ^^^X^ffuS ^^^^3^4^ oust mat the money niade mxM ^ mtoJ-ffc hy said, "and Speakine, for St. George peraonUj aiwrpnae guva u.to one |M| u one Q, ,, {  jatlsfled i, T) he said, he had discussed the puclMi, wiUie with1 natUHfui. ^ ^ % {hm (j^ernmert woulu question with one of the biggest U> money would oe BMng ^n dvls ed if. instead of payland owners of the parish. iw said mat factory own. Ihe treasury ior the bem-nt %ha mon  lo inspectors, they At the boglnnlnt of the season w* OJO HOI u. Aar. 1 .. IdOl pea i UM people. collecled a penny and a >>alf ' everyone was anxious to gel his MS, -no, having loid UMCS to He was suggesting to Govern, on ^ c net nd wllh Utlf cane IIOiind when they were big% % lag uieu -anvs at a parmui.-i meal that when they nsiwnalised f crnploy c i v u servanu to act ger. But il was obvious lhat all the ., .K ,A  rv. they could get a fleet < Ltcaa lor Uland-widc reaping i t peasant* crops. If Governbrcakiiui one of their big 00 that hey would ^ ^.^ of ^^ were pUlct!d Shaking about the nardehips awkward poslti He "also knew of an inspctu. vho had lo depend on lighting Assembly and Ihe isiana on a apeaxmg aoou. ue 'w""'^ ."a-ndationfmm'a factorv ownei to of deliberately misleading the Mot. tie gravf tarttshlps which ; % .miv ,xi*rienced at the h..nd. " '' That, too. wa* putting peasant* by assuring them that "^iS^Lr^Zr^ Mm fa deliee position ^OslmK of tht inds ui the facimv lit loo wanted lo draw to th .mention hardship?, which >v eicaled f'-r the pea by t  lieads of ccrlagq Oovcrnn* '.1 II .nu. J.am % ik1" u 1 dnd HIP [;> ma ih.-i Ant par % mot Wolfi lime i u arlj 'DepartmenU, he said, he % of the opinion lhal those  'epartmi'iit* .hould be iii-gaiHsed. He wus laking the Uoaa Bank a* an cxii pie where people have had to it for two years before they A Ihe loans they applied for. ,., H i'. cfmsing Ihe peasants to feel  their representatives are no n the f*>*-" history n 'hit Island lhat mere jyi r Talma said that about M Ut short was an c^'erf/helrnlnt; I.ibour I,J ^ear> ago wnen the sugar inHe victory and tn dlfflcuHics exuak u-y o( Uie island wa* uudciinembar perlenced by the fSfasanta were oing one of the State* ot thai Ihe repercussion' of tl ,,. lp Uu Imperial Governmcnl No tabeai g |osn of suu.oou to planttoric* and peasantt w.i u rajgu lactory owners wliu rased Government Agrn-ul1 ik. Those wero lltu day 1 .inn Ihe Assembly sri ..iii JIIJIIII 1 % % position 8uoh 'he eane* reverse the position and loin with ihe peasant to rob the factory owner. If as had been said, some irresponsible, stupid person st a  thing he did agree with was factory suesnd to one or two th.t an cnteiprising peasantry people "go and let Adams reap should be encouraged In any your canes'. that did not mean community as they were really that that was the feeling of facthe backbone of the community, lory'owners. ...... ., He could not agree with the rockMr Mottley said that in his own iM generality made by the sevPolitical Party, there was also oral lueeJtrti some Jealousy, and mentioned a n nianaUon asT to why "a peasant's Dealing with the remark* of case In which a man lost an elecwhole output could not be ground the mover of the motion, the sennon campaign, 'riling somebody any day he liked. But the practice ,r member for Christ Church, he "go lo ^ t t >, lel ( h m h JiL ,OU |ll SfiSTto r T eapmg ha rh C eT-n, >M;ml not only In St. George but llu 1 kind a* whole. That money wa* intended f> % He wa very glad, he said, thai Who eie In the sugar Industiie motion had originated fron' % said, "and n was nut % ,,, B |de of the table because it wai three week*. Il Is a loss lo Uie nl u i..t,, ^hen (he complex ion thrown nl them that they only twnu  r ugar production of the Island.' f ,,. :.ousr .hanged tha' some ...Tvntcxl the water front workVt t they were (waaw hat reay orwulJp % ... at, Bui % They an % ^ui % .,- % to Mr. X % .ii.ir ca nea to On ugaii factories," he *aid, "and as a rer'.;l!. their canes are lelt m UH ground (already cut) mi twn whidi All peaaanti were not analytical JJJJJ' m -'/ % < iinuEb to realise that the drier H e wanted honourable member* Lhe *nos were the more the |o koow thftl on | nV eatlgailnR the !.i,i ,ry owner* would benefit. No maUtr> there was absolutely no word) eould damn enough *uch  uth ln wh at member* had been nelarlawJ praetrcwa *jy the faotory raying, -that factory owners were ,.wners. refusing to reap peasants* canes. He hod heard some of the hocaute of any Labour"'factory owners say. he said, that J{ election trie, were not responsible, that did not instruct their manlaialillili be was using the wrong yardst The hon'ble Junior member for St. George had quoted two cases One of a poor old woman selling her canes to Lower Estate Factory and was "robbed" out of a half ton. Could the member tell the House how he knew that she was 1 bi>ej out of a half ton? Were the canes weighed before they ent to the factory, or were tin the did not instruct their man' J J" ^^,^0.^ The hon'ble Yet they were somewhat reeponsiSV,",.^, -, ho iro  n t ed a case at H He felt that the factoiy owners ,oj,.who were In the 1 .ere revenging the peasant, bejuatry began (.1 M beginning of the results of the la-i Ilt j." They were vlctimi the peasanu of then ratsariets and causing b wide Spread grievance Nvit only are UW peasants sufferink. but the W ami uu u wiioW ..,.n % ,., % at) Aill suffer The factorj" ownem were creeling a condit.i be looked into. he. said. He lei" that the 1 penally nn answer from a Socialist Oovtn.monl, would be 'nationali-.illon." He was ft ihe psMtoa that pt 1,  one of th, best sugai factories which wag central houlii be nationalised by fiovermienl for the purpoge of catering to the pcsanM. "They are creating nich % rnndltin-i todav thn' if nl leasl the Socialist Gnvcri'ment doe*; not .1 mgar fa* I 8oelaHt| Onvornmenl h. I st a'.l." 11 tleable. But he meant that ils year, the Government should ike steps to acquire Uie taeggp thai next year the peasants ild cease to suffer at the hand the fnctory owner-. warning meml un'-e they got wise to ( i" 1 ants wuuld turn then L from them and peasants) would be rigl I U Oovernmen' % ir. Th :is n" point In hivlne. 16 labourithout going to the extreme. . lUtuUqnal cruis today. Thai was a crisis, he said, and IKintended Inal lo be Uie tenor of JnlUong then. 'Veiy briefly." lie saki. re* poru have ronie to me as to every honourable member who tSSSM Soconding Mr. Talma'., address, sents country constituenctes. that Mr. J. CMotUcy said thai he diu when peasants lake their canes to not leal that the Government was factories after making ceii.nu,i muldcrlng it* responsibuily rangemenu to bring the  el alive to Uie difficulty Ihe .uch a date and on be experiencing in tickets to eerlify that the canes ..ping their lanes. He Kot many will be accepted, on arriving with rnplalnta from peasants In St the canes, they have been told l .din. it seemed to him as 11 ihcy must take the cartes to Mr. g factory owners went out of Adams' factory." eir way because lhe conservaHe was not going to m.rn1 ie not returned to power, matters, he said, fie had let'. hi He hoped that the Government work nn several occasion* ani % nl,) utilise the power lhat they gone to hi.s constituency to Hint ( ssoaaed. He was not in agreethat the reports were true ani itb the naUonalisatiun but correct In substance, fe 1 that the Government c uld 1-et them face* It. he ssajomed. omethlng about the matter He thought it was a moat da*tar(  There possible l.ieakdowns". He said he did not agree that llic8 0 < obtaining parts nallonalUitlon of ime factory" TTiet repairs, therefore, when a % lone was the only way out; but f,, tory manager told a peasant *fl when the constitution was m his canes and get them ready. tluT-ritened they had to resort to to lind himself on Saturday night every method at their disposal to with 20 or 25 acres of burnt cane, give a leason i democ.acy to the was Jt not rggjonabte to^^ capttalisti a j rireumrtanee,, lt see eye to eye with the uDour was therefore not true to ssy that hig business and capitalists, but % fortyprubably because of llfc n ^ re WM lh( ma iice a* had been he wanted them lo know that if 1 vilude under which they had .tigs^stad. To the contrary, he big businesses ana) capitalists * uld sav, that the relaUonship were not represented, there would ie-ween capital, peasant and labe no taxes or money for labour. .r was more hsrmonlous, with i>en*ants or anybody else. in laboi , IM^II brought up. should still be ? "f 23^ defended. About 17 to 20 per cent of the IsUuuTa sugar was produced by the peasants. I'.-as.mK should at alto* 1 I factory owner to fool them that they were doing them a favour by buying their canes. Every ton of sugar brought In by a peasant meant 48 cent* in the raoaoay owner's hands. Therefore there v .is some compcUtiun for peasants' So the question arose nd the peasant getMr. W. A. Crawford said benefits In Barbados lhat sometime ago he suggested, wren compared with any other when they were considering legWV 1 Indian colony. ulntion to control public utilities. < ( ne point which the senior that the manufacture of sugar trie nber for St. George had made should be regarded ns a public wfin which he agreed. That was utility, ih the factory owner was doing He said that Uie lime is ripe to the |ioasant no favour when he regard the manufacture of sugar Mtiifht his canes, because he was ; a public utility service. Factory aVIng a profit. That being so. owner* should be mad lv thing to try to .irltgn the factory owners should h(ll ou i d m ey'then argue that quotas for receiving peasant! IT verse the ^rinil th peasants'* canes. Thus althodgh he wo* making a profit j On Page 7 IT IS OKlTiN SURPRISING how qukUy baritacha. stiff, 1 scblog ouiclei or |ointi. 1 lumt'agi'. rhsunSBfeki pakn and OBBaan unnary mxihks due to uDpuritiei in the blood ,an be over-orr.r Strong, actres kidney* sale( K ird rour Itcalth by lUiming purirrH and runnful *i*i Out of SV sytem When kJJii'V an.on 11 iruulcquaie an,t u: ifilirrth< bloodoroperry. Ait< your O.eJ.rrW and lueut tic^ueut reinuBt. I % % u. .*. H-. a. be Kidney PSH ring happy relief by helping nng happy rehef by helping > decue ol. creamv, relrr*hm v and uea| are M.'m -urhnenilv n.iuri.hina % >i nhpla>Tlherner\ VOU -pend M (r*rl\ \ % %  of m r..ti' iron, UM i BSM W .1 rrai % ehjaawsi rap ... BSB OT h* you fed worn out. depressed, or generally run down a glass or two s da/ of Buckfau Tonic Wine will quickly restore lost energy jnd tone up the whole nervous system. Giving new vitality il fortifies you against fever and exhaustion and remember. Buckfait Tonic Wine s especially valuable alter illness. B1ICKFAST TONIC WIN! TAKE HOME A BOTTLE TODAY i0 De Witt's Pills % (ffadtweUiHyfo' BACKACHE LUMBAGO SCIATICA JOINT PAINS RHEUMATIC PAINS 0UI GUARANTEE De Witt's Pills a/made under strictly hygienic condibon* and conform to rigid standards of punty BACKACHE Try this for relief! If you get sharp stabs of pain in youi back when you stoop and. at other times, there is a dull and ronOnuoua ache, the cause can very often be traced to the kidney*. These vital organs should filter potaons oat of Uie system but omeumrm they get slugi'iih and congested and the bnckarhr roa % nffor  %  Nature's way c* warning you lhat your kidneys need assistance. A butted medicine for this purpose n De Witt's Pills. They have a cleansing and anuseptic action on Uie kidneys, helping to soothe them, tone them up and r-store them to ftuuuon naluralry. The*e is a long record a behind De W: ;'s PiBs, which have been relieving sufferers in many parts of Uie world for over half a century. If you could rid even a few of the grate fn 1 tetters sent in by backache suffereis who have found relief alter taking De Witt's Pills you would realize that your suffering may also be unnecessary. Why not try them for your trouble f They may be just vhat you need. Co to your chemist and get a sipply right away. DE WITTS PILLS for Kidney and Bladder Troubles ,.--:::v.:::::-,:-.::: .;;::-,::-s.::::::-. Wm. FOGARTV (ran LTD. TAILORS OF PROVEN RELIABILITY AND EXCELLENT FITTERS We carry a wide range of HICHGRADE SUITINGS (o choose from OUR GUARANTEED y*. CUTTING AND TAILORING WILL TRANSFORM YOUR CHOICE INTO A SI IT OF IMSTIXTMI.V Wm. FOGARTY (nn) LTD. 1 '/,',',V//.V.*/////M'///A'/.W'/.'.y-'.*-'-*.', J

wmBak Atom Bomb Cafl Be Ineffective! ^ L Truman (From HAKKV W. FKANT/) WASHINGTON. Apnl IS, Some informed a the Executive Branch vt the U.S. Government are privately confident that the courts will sustain constitutionalitv of Truman's order seizim; Steel Plants to avert mike They pointed uut the President had proclaimed the existence of a National Emergency as long ago as Decem b t 18.1950 when economic mobilization for Defence was get ting under way and that imminence of a dittatroui strike was obvious current to the phase of National Kmergencv. If.-.contend thai without the sNxure of tlw steel Plant, than n ti At strike which would have crippled defence production menaced MUilary Supply | ". % % ' % . r i.. v i .National Emergency than already Sources alleged thai wiinom inch action the President would have failed to luliit his ConttlUillonii] HespoiiMbiiitv M Commander in Chief of. the Ud NavyThey made no comment about nctlon against the Union who-e \, ed the dispute. While tfic iBthority of the president to make the seizure order is disputed. those who derend his position point to consideration or the Body of Legal Doctrine which they contend holds that the President has "inherent power"*' under the .institution to meet the .emergencv. Tin v also point to apparent precedents to PresidenUal action although the background of facts in earlier cam is not exactly dfnuar. Supportera of Truman's position suggested that if the United Stales wciv actually at war to formal dcclaration there could > no controversy about the seizure order. t'JV JUST A JOKESAYS MARGARET I IT WAS All IN FUN. but Margaret Trumio., daughter of the President, appears a bit nonplussed by the result of a television program gag. She was appearing In Hollywood with comedian Jimmy Duranle. In the course of the act, she was blindfolded and tent to a blackboard to check OS letters with a piece of cha'k. The result, as pictured, waa tha slogan "I Like Ike." She erased It and said. "I don't dare go home tonight." I.ater, Miss Truman admitted she was u on tha Joke and had been praised for being "auch a great % poit," (international Soumlpheroj U.K. Afakes $8im Htisiiu-ss Deal With e* % '' n l "i biilliant sunshine at 9.90 O.M.T. in the morning in a boulevard jampacked with vehicles It was so daring that Parisians immediately thought ,| mutt be Inspired by the British dim in which a similar holdup occurred. The Dim has been playing to packed houses in Paris tor several weeks Ills driving in >n ,. % French uutomobllo U.S. Soldiers Asked To Crusade For Peace WESTPOINT. NEW YORK. Apr. 15, General Omar N Brndli . Chairman si the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said last night theiv were nwnv militaiv largel (gainst which the atomic b mb would be ineffi wasted. Bradley in a speed prepared for dclivi U.S. Military Academy, sa i the myaterj of the atomic bomb encourages unlimited iieculUlon us t.. Ita war and added: '"Itie faaehiainn of tl % pun im mediately catches the eye /thow  for an easier, quicker and > more n I m tn the age old problems of winning % decisive victory Trouble On No. 2 Eutgtue MUX \oi Cawae Orash There are gets % gainst bom b would piled. If enen forcemany military t#vwhich the atomic im llc< lively be ,i, v wanted to disperse that soldiers walked ard the 100 yards apart, thc\ aousd ro Europe tomorrow race <>l the greatest of atumaV power on earth unles* uther men were there to stop them. However kf aw have the mearn to make tie enemy concentrate his forces. There are many mrkhodW available to destroy his military offensive power." A'Bomb Feared He told the cadets Uiat the whole world stands In awe of the tiny but powerful atom. "And % I any time", ha added, "ita use as a weapon may be entrusted to your skill und knowledge in i variety of ways." The general said the nation's knowledge oscience ha* outstripped Its rape* Ity to control it and appealed to the soldiers to crusade for peace while preparing for war. He stud' "Education and our own Christian living must give us control over invention of science. With nwistious weapons man already has humanity in danger of being trapped in this world by lb moral adolescence. Today we know more about peace. SAN JUAN. Apnl IS, John ii Mndolph, chief AVI lion Division. Inaulau Q Transportation Authoi Ity whiCr g** l*a Otande Ai Piman.etK-,,,, An\v;iyIX-4 which ei-ash.xl here >n Kn.l., from New York at 22 37 on Thur*. W unh her Numlier Two PkOtor not funciinniiiK. lie .mi (he gtmn* radioed here askuig for Emergeni y Eqalpment to be made in* runway because the plane m.Kht have t.. m..ke l( f.neisi Uiuinj. However, the plane landed % % rely Hjui.hiipi to ortlt-iiii mformaUou nvailable U him the Numlier Two engIrM funcllune.l perfectly OB Frul.iv and %ras not responsible for the i l.isM future must passca in thi word.UP. 31 KILLED l\ Hill 11) \) ACCtDMNTS'll\ FMANCl PARIS, April 111 Police said 31 persons ware killed and 46 wounded in accidcnls in Prance during the fortyeight hour Easter holldayi ar than we know about 1 Kigures arc not Anal and it wn American soldJors of tis*, fen red other mddentB vjbuhi % < crusaders for redited from truest sense of the I where commun -h-hitt re slow. IT. $84(iO0,0flO h^id been concluded with Russia and Communist China. Jack Perry the delegation's f, said China would sup. ply Britain with eggs and pork in exchange fur textiles on a batter basai. Russia will pay in itetling for what it buys. Perry said he would confer wilh British Aims this week before returning to Moscow for further discussions on signing the .iHi-cements. A previous announcement from Most Britain had made a S2fi.UO0.OO0 agreement with China.t'T. % ifi In Hospital After Wedding liOUK Thirty-six paraonj are In hotI Lil with '-! |  "rollowIng a weddsfig barqurt Thirtyi'Ki ( :,.. ,.t an) aura part of 71 quests at the sumptuous banquet in a restaurant here yesterday alter the weddlnR uf Franca Maltia 19 and Glrolano De Use 32. All 34 guests in hoapltal hail generous helpings of weridiin; cake belie\'ed to be the cause of the food poisoning. In addition two waiters who later helped themselves to the remnants were in hot) acute stomach pains. The wedding couple who also ate of the cake left for the Isle of Capri immediately after the /or their honeymoon No word has been received to indicate whether they ,irc nl.-o itrickcn. l\P. Police had time to make a move. The robbers left $40,000 worth of ingots behind in the truck. Within seconds of the getaway the two Police cars earrybii a criminal squad of men of the holdup about half a mile fti-.m the Plate lie L'Opcra in the heart of the cily. Other ears patrolled tin catch the gang. The Police question* nesses among the larffl pot from neighbouring shops an % bul avBrybody had .i dlrTaraat story to tell and it was some time uld piece lugeihei % reliable account of what happened. V.V. \cw Stumps IsSIH'd PbilattUtU Erorn ail peruthai of dtd the (Icncral Post Office yesterday morning lo get first day covers of the new -lamps to commemorate the Centenary of the ilrsl adhesive % were on Sale. ii'Himina12 and 24 cents, but in each rase the pattern is the same. The stamp carries the portrait of the late King instead of that of the present Qui i piituie of the r i-istagc stamp Throughout the day thenlong queues in the O.P.' I Small U.K. Aid To Colonial Empire liu t foreign (jountriw G&tPlenliy 3forP FORMER KING TO EXPLORE JUNGLE Leader LAPAZ BOLIVIA, Apt bloodied I I') dead V revoli*. and r who is % % : M-flt ,1 (Ii Pa* e h 1 a f. se sjreart> v.trs_ % 1 % 1 [I ; % | % from power lii % I % % IK tOUTf TO SOUIH AMERICA where the ex-monarch will take part In a new exploration of the Jungla between llrull and Vcneauela, former King Leopold of llelglum and hi* wife. Princess Rcthy, leave a plane lo board the Dutch ship Amlyk at Lisbon, Portugal. ffnfamatiuaeJV from All Quarter* collector Generals Arrested HAVANA. Apnl The Cuban Army Chief Staff Francisco Tabermlui said > ex-Kcnerals Quirino Urta, Josej Monteagudo, Juan Consuegra I and ex-Colonel Vicente Leon, all |stton of the >Ump to commemorate supporters of tha Mb 'i^n'ry of tbi Hint adheslTe dent Carlos PrlO BotSU po^Uae ttuap of the UOand. TtW THIft is the thret cpnts denomln'arrcsted" last night, bul released after a few minute-' ing. Tabcrnilla did not disclose the nature of the detention < % < queslioninn. Neither ii. I plain the reason for the exttadi1 e\ new lne went Into clrcnlsUnn yes terdsy. WINlr^ CRUISE SEASON ENDS  HEW YORK. The 22 cruises mil of N lo the West Isxlie^ and South SOOTH ANNIVERSARY iHMhiNi to ITALY. April IJ, I C An loeert, twtablaa and tourful "" cruise teuoe ists flock.-] in Central Italy to-day to eele-' Holland-Amerii a Line each carbrale the S00tii"i,nniveSrv ol the 1 n ^' * mc 5 M ***** uir1h ^ i :!rl | the season Italian President i r \ formallv opened a series of eclebra' "OHofJO !" earned W passengers % lies in iwinting, enincering.' 1*" anatomy. ph)iics. philosophy summed Up Ihe w\ mee and made him one of % Dignitaries met In n t art house where : rarn n  Leonardo was bom oi April IS, ) 1JVt ; .; 1432 son of a -icn merch.int r.ere! if,summer and autumn. de Vinci.I'.p. -B.l.r. in three Watl Indies cruises t he I % rules*. are not inly planning full cruise proNot Enough Sailors For Ships In N.Z. LONDON. WELLINGTON: The greater part of New Zealnnd's naval strength is lying idle because, there are not niflViUnt sailors to man the stUpo, Though two frigates are in Korean waters, four itaa and one rruiser are lied up at Auckland. The cruiser Blirk I'rFjire baa iu>t been to sea % Zealand acquired her in 1946. AMSTERDAM: For less than £23 a Dutch firm i a selling an IKI Of .ill work." Thus robot household marvel vacuum le-ins. polishes the furniture and floor, peels the vegetables, shakes % erators signed wage agreement with the Now Jersey. Bell Telephone Company, but their return to work hinged on the Western Kleetrie Dispute which has disrupted the talap] ne service across the nation. Tin agreement signed .shortly oftet midnight provided weekly wage i'w creases from 4 dollars to 4.4 dolluni and % 'f^in|Be benefit*!. The end of the new Jersey dispute which Involved 10,500 workers added up to 'one more patWrn settlement" in the nationwide telephone strike, but operators said they would continue to observe picket lines set up by 16,000 striking Western Electric employees. Both belong to Communications Workers of America (CIO) Further ncgotiauon* were wrheduled in New York today in uttempt to end Ute eight-day-old strike by Western Electric Company employees in 43 states i the district of Columbia. The Cok till .500,000 f3.200.0O0 Ii ( % rants and Louno iul llguio In in grants I.... I'hr hide n (I not lude advances made to th Overseas Food Cori-oraii..: I Dcvulpllietit lha % in .'.< % ..' Jel ey, .1 k, point 10 Hi. i an a BMI deal with lha *|r 5 ''You're fiioloknow. Jimm-. Ihe t.i-t lime we camr here it mi II new cocktail: this iran lir-iiiu Baa . loo." "11^ ,lo imr belt to [Irait. 11 hoi'i> hi you'd tik* tlum. I hey do fg aaw a rltanrr and a tonUr tmokt." sllOt'X ( 1TV. IOWA, Apr. IS, IKt iNIIKd.lli TOWN 1 of IKe Miwiurl \ .-ll. were lurnrri bilo lsUada b* the relentless advance of the record Miwourt river flood crest. The Miaasssipfi River mr.inv.hllr swept Into St Paul and Wlnona, Mlnncapolii. lo begin Us devoalatlna march Pi the south which the Red Cross said would brine record crests as far -oulh as the Hsnalbsl MusMMiii. In eight flood soaked states of the mid west u total of more than 85.000 persona were homeless. The Red Cross said 74.000 persons were "affected." Fur the most part, normal life was suspended as the vast area bent every effort t< V< op the rivers in check. The deepening: crest of the Missouri sped southward down ihe Jow.i-Nebraska border. It was due to crest to-day at well ovei opposite the fowo towns of Sloan. Whiting and Onawa from 25 to 40 miles south of Sioux Ci'y.U.P l'.\. < JOIM.4 il Krf uses To Wear BlspaUs a YOIIK. Apiii IS. Th.United riauoni Beeunty Council lefUaad ia*t oigbl to hear the full dress debate on Tunisia's I : The Council on a live to % ii four % bat* jec-ted tin i 4 the AsJan-Africnn tli. to at on has called foi the ground that issuewaa an ucanul threat to security The net were Russia. Nation-1 P M % Unite.! Btagea, Turke] and the Netherlands ..1 ,. put the debate i -C1M You are behind thr times. yJaVj '""I lyrical about them for \ $1.04 lor 50 Smoke lo your throat's content du MAURIER THE EXCLUSIVE % 1 I OIWEIBUT FILTER T WILKINIOH A WSTVBS P CIGARETTE ro.. I TO., tl!)i;tTO\VM